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INFO-DIR-SECTION Emacs
START-INFO-DIR-ENTRY
* Compat: (compat).     Compatibility Library for Emacs Lisp.
END-INFO-DIR-ENTRY


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Top,  Next: Introduction,  Up: (dir)

"Compat" Manual
***************

This manual documents the usage of the "Compat" Emacs lisp library, the
forward-compatibility library for Emacs Lisp, corresponding to version
29.1.4.2.

   Copyright © 2022-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.

     Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this
     document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,
     Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software
     Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts
     being “A GNU Manual,” and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a)
     below.  A copy of the license is included in the section entitled
     “GNU Free Documentation License.”

     (a) The FSF’s Back-Cover Text is: “You have the freedom to copy and
     modify this GNU manual.”

* Menu:

* Introduction::
* Support::
* Development::
* Function Index::
* Variable Index::

— The Detailed Node Listing —

Introduction

* Overview::
* Usage::
* Limitations::

Support

* Emacs 25.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 25.1
* Emacs 26.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 26.1
* Emacs 27.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 27.1
* Emacs 28.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 28.1
* Emacs 29.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 29.1



File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Introduction,  Next: Support,  Prev: Top,  Up: Top

1 Introduction
**************

* Menu:

* Overview::
* Usage::
* Limitations::


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Overview,  Next: Usage,  Up: Introduction

1.1 Overview
============

The objective of Compat is to provide "forwards compatibility" library
for Emacs Lisp.  By using Compat, an Elisp package does not have to make
the decision to either use new and useful functionality or support old
versions of Emacs.

   The library provides support back until Emacs 24.4.  The intended
audience are package developers that are interested in using newer
developments, without having to break compatibility.


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Usage,  Next: Limitations,  Prev: Overview,  Up: Introduction

1.2 Usage
=========

The intended use-case for this library is for package developers to add
as a dependency in the header.  The version of the Compat library
mirrors the version of Emacs releases.  The current version of Compat
corresponds to the upcoming Emacs 29 release.

     ;; Package-Requires: ((emacs "24.4") (compat "29.1.4.2"))

   There is no need to depend on ‘emacs 24.4’ specifically.  One can
choose any newer version, if features not provided by Compat necessitate
it, for example bug fixes or UI improvements.

   In any file where compatibility forms are used, a

     (require 'compat)

   should be added early on.  In packages which are part of Emacs itself
and which want to take advantage of Compat, the ‘noerror’ flag should be
specified: ‘(require 'compat nil 'noerror)’.  In the future a minimal
version of Compat may be added to the Emacs core, such that the
‘noerror’ flag will not be necessary anymore.

   This will load all necessary Compat definitions.  Compat loads the
‘seq’ library which is preloaded by default on Emacs 29.  Note that if
Compat is installed on a recent version of Emacs, all of the definitions
are disabled at compile time, such that no negative performance impact
is incurred.

   Note that Compat provides replacement functions with extended
functionality for functions that are already defined (‘sort’, ‘assoc’,
...).  These functions may have changed their calling convention
(additional optional arguments) or may have changed their behavior.
These functions must be looked up explicitly with ‘compat-function’ or
called explicitly with ‘compat-call’.  We call them “Extended
Definitions”.  In contrast, newly “Added Definitions” can be called as
usual.

     (compat-call assoc key alist testfn) ;; Call extended `assoc'
     (mapcan fun seq)                     ;; Call newly added `mapcan'

 -- Macro: compat-call fun &rest args
     This macro calls the compatibility function FUN with ARGS.  Many
     functions provided by Compat can be called directly without this
     macro.  However in the case where Compat provides an alternative
     version of an existing function, the function call has to go
     through ‘compat-call’.  This happens for example when the calling
     convention of a function has changed.

 -- Macro: compat-function fun
     This macro returns the compatibility function symbol for FUN.  See
     ‘compat-call’ for a more convenient macro to directly call
     compatibility functions.

   If Compat is used in core packages, where Compat must be required
currently with the ‘noerror’ flag, the macros ‘compat-call’ and
‘compat-function’ ar not available.  In the future the macros could be
added to subr.  Alternatively a minimal version of compat.el could be
added to the core.  For now it is necessary to replicate the definition
of the macros within core packages.  For example the package ERC defines
its own macro ‘erc-compat-call’, which replicates the Compat definition
precisely.

   This design has been chosen since Compat does not advise or override
existing functions.  Generally Compat is written in defensive style
which is supposed to reduce potential breakage, and to increase the
chances of staying binary compatible across releases.  The extensive
test coverage ensures that we can maintain high quality, which is
crucial for Compat which is not restricted to a namespace like usual
libraries.

   If you intend to use a compatibility function in your code it is
recommended that you take a look at the test suite ‘compat-tests.el’.
There you can see the supported calling conventions, which are
guaranteed to work on the supported Emacs versions.  We ensure this
using continuous integration.  All functions provided by Compat are
covered by the test suite.  There is a link to the corresponding test on
the first line of each definition.

   You may want to subscribe to the compat-announce
(https://lists.sr.ht/~pkal/compat-announce) mailing list to be notified
when new versions are released or relevant changes are made.  We also
provide a development mailing list
(https://lists.sr.ht/~pkal/compat-devel) (~pkal/compat-devel@lists.sr.ht
<~pkal/compat-devel@lists.sr.ht>).


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Limitations,  Prev: Usage,  Up: Introduction

1.3 Limitations
===============

The Compat library has a number of limitations.  Complete backwards
compatibility cannot be provided due to the scope of Compat and for
technical reasons.  The scope is intentionally restricted in order to
limit the size of Compat and to ensure that the library stays
maintainable.

   Emacs version 24.4 is chosen as the oldest version supported by
Compat, since Elisp has seen significant changes at that version.  Since
24.4 Emacs major versions consistently bump the major version number.
On the library level, subr-x was introduced in 24.4.  Most popular Emacs
packages already require 24.4 or even newer versions of Emacs.
Supporting for more historical Emacs versions would complicate
maintainance while only few packages and users would benefit.

   Below we list a number of reasons why certain functionality cannot be
provided.  Note that in some special cases exceptions can be made and
functions can still be added to Compat even if they satisfy the criteria
from the list.  In case you miss functionality which you think should
belong here, a *note report: Development. would be much appreciated.

   • The additional functionality is a command or a user-facing minor or
     major mode.  Compat is limited to functionality on the “library
     level”.  Generally functions provided by Compat are
     non-interactive, such that the user interface (M-x) is unaffected
     by the presence of Compat.

   • The function is not useful for package authors or not intended to
     be used by packages, but is only useful on the configuration level.
     The macro ‘setopt’ is such an example.

   • Private (double dashed) functions are not ported back.  If Compat
     includes some private functions, they are meant purely for internal
     usage.

   • The added or extended function belongs to the “application level”
     and not the “library level”.  Features which are not preloaded
     often belong to the “application level”.  Application examples are
     programming modes or modes like Dired, IRC and Gnus.  If these
     modes are extended with new functions, these are not ported back.

   • An existing function or macro was extended by some new
     functionality.  To support these cases, the function or macro would
     have to be advised.  Since this is invasive and adds significant
     overhead, even when the new feature is not used, Compat does not
     use advices.  As a compromise, compatibility functions and macros
     with a changed calling convention or behavior can be accessed via
     the ‘compat-function’ and ‘compat-call’ macros.  In this manual we
     call such definitions “Extended Definitions”.  An example is the
     function ‘plist-get’.  Note that extended functions are subject to
     closer scrutiny, since their usage via ‘compat-call’ is not
     completely painless.  If a particular extended function does not
     see much usage or the extension yields only marginal benefits, we
     may not provide it as part of Compat.

   • Bug fixes are usually not ported back as part of Compat.  Sometimes
     library functions show wrong behavior for edge cases.  In those
     cases Compat could in principle provide a compatibility function
     which is invoked via ‘compat-call’.  Such extended definitions
     would increase the maintainance burden of Compat.  At the same time
     the benefits would be small given that Compat does not override
     existing definitions.

   • The definition belongs to an Emacs core package, which is also
     distributed via ELPA. Compat does not have to provide backward
     compatibility for core packages since the updated package can be
     installed directly from ELPA. Examples include the libraries xref,
     project, seq, map and transient.

   • New functionality depends on an entire new, non-trivial core
     library, which is infeasible to duplicate within Compat.  If a
     backport of such a library is required, the preferred approach is
     to either release the library separately on GNU ELPA as a core
     package or as a separately maintained GNU ELPA package.  An example
     is the iso8601 library.

   • New functionality was implemented in the C core, or depends on
     external libraries that cannot be reasonably duplicated in the
     scope of a compatibility library.  Sometimes new functions on the C
     level rely on internal data structures, which we cannot access,
     rendering a backport impossible.  For example a missing libxml
     cannot be emulated.

   • The semantics of Elisp changed on a deep level.  For example the
     addition of Bigint support in Emacs 27.1 cannot be replicated on
     the level of Compat.


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Support,  Next: Development,  Prev: Introduction,  Up: Top

2 Support
*********

This section goes into the features that Compat manages and doesn’t
manage to provide for each Emacs version.

* Menu:

* Emacs 25.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 25.1
* Emacs 26.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 26.1
* Emacs 27.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 27.1
* Emacs 28.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 28.1
* Emacs 29.1::                   Compatibility support for Emacs 29.1


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Emacs 25.1,  Next: Emacs 26.1,  Up: Support

2.1 Emacs 25.1
==============

2.1.1 Added Definitions
-----------------------

The following functions and macros are implemented in Emacs 25.1.  These
functions are made available by Compat on Emacs versions older than
25.1.

 -- User Option: text-quoting-style
     The value of this user option is a symbol that specifies the style
     Emacs should use for single quotes in the wording of help and
     messages.  If the option’s value is ‘curve’, the style is ‘like
     this’ with curved single quotes.  If the value is ‘straight’, the
     style is 'like this' with straight apostrophes.  If the value is
     ‘grave’, quotes are not translated and the style is `like this'
     with grave accent and apostrophe, the standard style before Emacs
     version 25.  The default value ‘nil’ acts like ‘curve’ if curved
     single quotes seem to be displayable, and like ‘grave’ otherwise.

     This option is useful on platforms that have problems with curved
     quotes.  You can customize it freely according to your personal
     preference.

 -- Function: region-bounds
     Return the boundaries of the region.  Value is a list of one or
     more cons cells of the form ‘(start . end)’.  It will have more
     than one cons cell when the region is non-contiguous, see
     ‘region-noncontiguous-p’ and ‘extract-rectangle-bounds’.

 -- Function: region-noncontiguous-p
     Return non-nil if the region contains several pieces.  An example
     is a rectangular region handled as a list of separate contiguous
     regions for each line.

 -- Macro: save-mark-and-excursion body...
     This macro is like ‘save-excursion’, but also saves and restores
     the mark location and ‘mark-active’.  This macro does what
     ‘save-excursion’ did before Emacs 25.1.

 -- Function: format-message string &rest objects
     This function acts like ‘format’, except it also converts any grave
     accents (`) and apostrophes (') in STRING as per the value of
     ‘text-quoting-style’.

     Typically grave accent and apostrophe in the format translate to
     matching curved quotes, e.g., "Missing `%s'" might result in
     "Missing ‘foo’".  *Note (elisp)Text Quoting Style::, for how to
     influence or inhibit this translation.

     *note (elisp)Formatting Strings::.

 -- Function: directory-name-p filename
     This function returns non-‘nil’ if FILENAME ends with a directory
     separator character.  This is the forward slash ‘/’ on GNU and
     other POSIX-like systems; MS-Windows and MS-DOS recognize both the
     forward slash and the backslash ‘\’ as directory separators.

     *Note (elisp)Directory Names::.

 -- Function: string-greaterp string1 string2
     This function returns the result of comparing STRING1 and STRING2
     in the opposite order, i.e., it is equivalent to calling
     ‘(string-lessp STRING2 STRING1)’.

     *Note (elisp)Text Comparison::.

 -- Macro: with-file-modes mode body...
     This macro evaluates the BODY forms with the default permissions
     for new files temporarily set to MODES (whose value is as for
     ‘set-file-modes’ above).  When finished, it restores the original
     default file permissions, and returns the value of the last form in
     BODY.

     This is useful for creating private files, for example.

     *Note (elisp)Changing Files::.

 -- Function: alist-get key alist &optional default remove
     This function is similar to ‘assq’.  It finds the first association
     ‘(KEY . VALUE)’ by comparing KEY with ALIST elements, and, if
     found, returns the VALUE of that association.  If no association is
     found, the function returns DEFAULT.

     This is a generalized variable (*note (elisp)Generalized
     Variables::) that can be used to change a value with ‘setf’.  When
     using it to set a value, optional argument REMOVE non-‘nil’ means
     to remove KEY’s association from ALIST if the new value is ‘eql’ to
     DEFAULT.

     *note (elisp)Association Lists::.

 -- Macro: if-let (bindings...) then &rest else...
     As with ‘let*’, BINDINGS will consist of ‘(SYMBOL VALUE-FORM)’
     entries that are evaluated and bound sequentially.  If all
     VALUE-FORM evaluate to non-‘nil’ values, then THEN is evaluated as
     were the case with a regular ‘let*’ expression, with all the
     variables bound.  If any VALUE-FORM evaluates to ‘nil’, ELSE is
     evaluated, without any bound variables.

     A binding may also optionally drop the SYMBOL, and simplify to
     ‘(VALUE-FORM)’ if only the test is of interest.

     For the sake of backwards compatibility, it is possible to write a
     single binding without a binding list:

          (if-let* (SYMBOL (test)) foo bar)
          ≡
          (if-let* ((SYMBOL (test))) foo bar)

 -- Macro: when-let (bindings...) &rest body
     As with ‘when’, if one is only interested in the case where all
     BINDINGS are non-nil.  Otherwise BINDINGS are interpreted just as
     they are by ‘if-let*’.

 -- Function: hash-table-empty hash-table
     Check whether HASH-TABLE is empty (has 0 elements).

 -- Macro: thread-first &rest forms
     Combine FORMS into a single expression by “threading” each element
     as the _first_ argument of their successor.  Elements of FORMS can
     either be an list of an atom.

     For example, consider the threading expression and it’s equivalent
     macro expansion:

          (thread-first
            5
            (+ 20)
            (/ 25)
            -
            (+ 40))
          ≡
          (+ (- (/ (+ 5 20) 25)) 40)

     Note how the single ‘-’ got converted into a list before threading.
     This example uses arithmetic functions, but ‘thread-first’ is not
     restricted to arithmetic or side-effect free code.

 -- Macro: thread-last &rest forms
     Combine FORMS into a single expression by “threading” each element
     as the _last_ argument of their successor.  Elements of FORMS can
     either be an list of an atom.

     For example, consider the threading expression and it’s equivalent
     macro expansion:

          (thread-first
            5
            (+ 20)
            (/ 25)
            -
            (+ 40))
          ≡
          (+ 40 (- (/ 25 (+ 20 5))))

     Note how the single ‘-’ got converted into a list before threading.
     This example uses arithmetic functions, but ‘thread-last’ is not
     restricted to arithmetic or side-effect free code.

 -- Function: macroexpand-1 form &optional environment
     This function expands macros like ‘macroexpand’, but it only
     performs one step of the expansion: if the result is another macro
     call, ‘macroexpand-1’ will not expand it.

     *Note Expansion: (elisp)Expansion.

 -- Function: macroexp-quote e
     Return an expression E such that ‘(eval e)’ is V.

 -- Function: macroexp-parse body
     Parse a function BODY into ‘(declarations . exps)’.

 -- Function: bool-vector &rest objects
     This function creates and returns a bool-vector whose elements are
     the arguments, OBJECTS.

     *Note (elisp)Bool-Vectors::.

2.1.2 Extended Definitions
--------------------------

These functions must be called explicitly via ‘compat-call’, since their
calling convention or behavior was extended in Emacs 25.1:

 -- Function: compat-call sort sequence predicate
     This function sorts SEQUENCE stably.  Note that this function
     doesn’t work for all sequences; it may be used only for lists and
     vectors.  If SEQUENCE is a list, it is modified destructively.
     This functions returns the sorted SEQUENCE and compares elements
     using PREDICATE.  A stable sort is one in which elements with equal
     sort keys maintain their relative order before and after the sort.
     Stability is important when successive sorts are used to order
     elements according to different criteria.

     *Note (elisp)Sequence Functions::.

     The compatibility version adds support for vectors to be sorted,
     not just lists.

2.1.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------

Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 25.1:

   • The function ‘macroexp-macroexpand’.
   • The macro ‘macroexp-let2*’.
   • The function ‘directory-files-recursively’.
   • New ‘pcase’ patterns.
   • The hook ‘prefix-command-echo-keystrokes-functions’ and
     ‘prefix-command-preserve-state-hook’.
   • The hook ‘pre-redisplay-functions’.
   • The function ‘make-process’.
   • Support for the variable ‘inhibit-message’.
   • The ‘define-inline’ functionality.
   • The functions ‘string-collate-lessp’ and ‘string-collate-equalp’.
   • The function ‘funcall-interactively’.
   • The function ‘buffer-substring-with-bidi-context’.
   • The function ‘font-info’.
   • The function ‘default-font-width’.
   • The function ‘window-font-height’ and ‘window-font-width’.
   • The function ‘window-max-chars-per-line’.
   • The function ‘set-binary-mode’.
   • The functions ‘bufferpos-to-filepos’ and ‘filepos-to-bufferpos’.
   • The ‘thunk’ library.


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Emacs 26.1,  Next: Emacs 27.1,  Prev: Emacs 25.1,  Up: Support

2.2 Emacs 26.1
==============

2.2.1 Added Definitions
-----------------------

The following functions and macros are implemented in Emacs 26.1.  These
functions are made available by Compat on Emacs versions older than
26.1.

 -- Function: assoc-delete-all key alist
     This function is like ‘assq-delete-all’ except that it uses ‘equal’
     to compare elements.

 -- Function: read-answer question answers
     This function prompts the user with text in QUESTION, which should
     end in the ‘SPC’ character.  The function includes in the prompt
     the possible responses in ANSWERS by appending them to the end of
     QUESTION.  The possible responses are provided in ANSWERS as an
     alist whose elements are of the following form:

          (LONG-ANSWER SHORT-ANSWER HELP-MESSAGE)

     where LONG-ANSWER is the complete text of the user response, a
     string; SHORT-ANSWER is a short form of the same response, a single
     character or a function key; and HELP-MESSAGE is the text that
     describes the meaning of the answer.  If the variable
     ‘read-answer-short’ is non-‘nil’, the prompt will show the short
     variants of the possible answers and the user is expected to type
     the single characters/keys shown in the prompt; otherwise the
     prompt will show the long variants of the answers, and the user is
     expected to type the full text of one of the answers and end by
     pressing <RET>.  If ‘use-dialog-box’ is non-‘nil’, and this
     function was invoked by mouse events, the question and the answers
     will be displayed in a GUI dialog box.

     The function returns the text of the LONG-ANSWER selected by the
     user, regardless of whether long or short answers were shown in the
     prompt and typed by the user.

     Here is an example of using this function:

          (let ((read-answer-short t))
            (read-answer "Foo "
               '(("yes"  ?y "perform the action")
                 ("no"   ?n "skip to the next")
                 ("all"  ?! "perform for the rest without more questions")
                 ("help" ?h "show help")
                 ("quit" ?q "exit"))))

 -- Function: mapcan function sequence
     This function applies FUNCTION to each element of SEQUENCE, like
     ‘mapcar’, but instead of collecting the results into a list, it
     returns a single list with all the elements of the results (which
     must be lists), by altering the results (using ‘nconc’; *note
     (elisp)Rearrangement::).  Like with ‘mapcar’, SEQUENCE can be of
     any type except a char-table.

          ;; Contrast this: (mapcar #'list '(a b c d)) ⇒ ((a) (b) (c)
          (d)) ;; with this: (mapcan #'list '(a b c d)) ⇒ (a b c d)

     *Note (elisp)Mapping Functions::.

 -- Function: cXXXr
 -- Function: cXXXXr
     *Note (elisp)List Elements::.

 -- Function: gensym &optional prefix
     This function returns a symbol using ‘make-symbol’, whose name is
     made by appending ‘gensym-counter’ to PREFIX and incrementing that
     counter, guaranteeing that no two calls to this function will
     generate a symbol with the same name.  The prefix defaults to
     ‘"g"’.

 -- Variable: gensym-counter
     See ‘gensym’.

 -- Function: buffer-hash &optional buffer-or-name
     Return a hash of BUFFER-OR-NAME.  If ‘nil’, this defaults to the
     current buffer.  As opposed to ‘secure-hash’, this function
     computes the hash based on the internal representation of the
     buffer, disregarding any coding systems.  It’s therefore only
     useful when comparing two buffers running in the same Emacs, and is
     not guaranteed to return the same hash between different Emacs
     versions.  It should be somewhat more efficient on larger buffers
     than ‘secure-hash’ is, and should not allocate more memory.

 -- Macro: file-name-unquote name
     This macro removes the quotation prefix ‘/:’ from the file NAME, if
     any.  If NAME is a remote file name, the local part of NAME is
     unquoted.

 -- Function: file-name-quoted-p name
     This macro returns non-‘nil’, when NAME is quoted with the prefix
     ‘/:’.  If NAME is a remote file name, the local part of NAME is
     checked.

     *Note (elisp)File Name Expansion::.

 -- Function: file-name-quote name
     This macro adds the quotation prefix ‘/:’ to the file NAME.  For a
     local file NAME, it prefixes NAME with ‘/:’.  If NAME is a remote
     file name, the local part of NAME (*note (elisp)Magic File Names::)
     is quoted.  If NAME is already a quoted file name, NAME is returned
     unchanged.

          (substitute-in-file-name (compat-call file-name-quote "bar/~/foo")) ⇒
               "/:bar/~/foo"

          (substitute-in-file-name (compat-call file-name-quote "/ssh:host:bar/~/foo"))
               ⇒ "/ssh:host:/:bar/~/foo"

     The macro cannot be used to suppress file name handlers from magic
     file names (*note (elisp)Magic File Names::).

     *Note (elisp)File Name Expansion::.

 -- Function: make-nearby-temp-file prefix &optional dir-flag suffix
     This function is similar to ‘make-temp-file’, but it creates a
     temporary file as close as possible to ‘default-directory’.  If
     PREFIX is a relative file name, and ‘default-directory’ is a remote
     file name or located on a mounted file systems, the temporary file
     is created in the directory returned by the function
     ‘temporary-file-directory’.  Otherwise, the function
     ‘make-temp-file’ is used.  PREFIX, DIR-FLAG and SUFFIX have the
     same meaning as in ‘make-temp-file’.

          (let ((default-directory "/ssh:remotehost:")) (make-nearby-temp-file
            "foo")) ⇒ "/ssh:remotehost:/tmp/foo232J6v"

 -- Variable: mounted-file-systems
     A regular expression matching files names that are probably on a
     mounted file system.

 -- Function: temporary-file-directory
     The directory for writing temporary files via
     ‘make-nearby-temp-file’.  In case of a remote ‘default-directory’,
     this is a directory for temporary files on that remote host.  If
     such a directory does not exist, or ‘default-directory’ ought to be
     located on a mounted file system (see ‘mounted-file-systems’), the
     function returns ‘default-directory’.  For a non-remote and
     non-mounted ‘default-directory’, the value of the variable
     ‘temporary-file-directory’ is returned.

     *Note (elisp)Unique File Names::.

 -- Macro: if-let* (bindings...) then &rest else
     ‘if-let*’ is mostly equivalent to ‘if-let’, with the exception that
     the legacy ‘(if (VAR (test)) foo bar)’ syntax is not permitted.

 -- Macro: when-let* (bindings...) then &rest else
     ‘when-let*’ is mostly equivalent to ‘when-let’, with the exception
     that the legacy ‘(when-let (VAR (test)) foo bar)’ syntax is not
     permitted.

 -- Macro: and-let* (bindings...) &rest body
     A combination of LET* and AND, analogous to ‘when-let*’.  If all
     BINDINGS are non-‘nil’ and BODY is ‘nil’, then the result of the
     ‘and-let*’ form will be the last value bound in BINDINGS.

     **Please Note:** The implementation provided by Compat does not
     include a bug that was observed with Emacs 26 (see
     <https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=31840>).

 -- Function: file-local-name filename
     This function returns the _local part_ of FILENAME.  This is the
     part of the file’s name that identifies it on the remote host, and
     is typically obtained by removing from the remote file name the
     parts that specify the remote host and the method of accessing it.
     For example:

          (file-local-name "/ssh:USER@HOST:/foo/bar") ⇒
               "/foo/bar"

     For a remote FILENAME, this function returns a file name which
     could be used directly as an argument of a remote process (*note
     (elisp)Asynchronous Processes::, and *note (elisp)Synchronous
     Processes::), and as the program to run on the remote host.  If
     FILENAME is local, this function returns it unchanged.

     *Note (elisp)Magic File Names::.

 -- Function: read-multiple-choice prompt choices
     Ask user a multiple choice question.  PROMPT should be a string
     that will be displayed as the prompt.

     CHOICES is an alist where the first element in each entry is a
     character to be entered, the second element is a short name for the
     entry to be displayed while prompting (if there’s room, it might be
     shortened), and the third, optional entry is a longer explanation
     that will be displayed in a help buffer if the user requests more
     help.

     See *note Reading One Event: (elisp)Reading One Event.

 -- Function: image-property
     Defined in ‘image.el’.

     This function can also be used as a generalised variable.

 -- Function: file-attribute-type
     Return the field _type_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-link-number
     Return the field _link-number_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-user-id
     Return the field _user-id_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-group-id
     Return the field _group-id_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-access-time
     Return the field _access-time_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-modification-time
     Return the field _modification-time_ as generated by
     ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-status-change-time
     Return the field _modification-time_ as generated by
     ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-size
     Return the field _size_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-modes
     Return the field _modes_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-inode-number
     Return the field _inode-number_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-device-number
     Return the field _device-number_ as generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-attribute-collect attributes &rest attr-names
     Filter the file attributes ATTRIBUTES, as generated by
     ‘file-attributes’, according to ATTR-NAMES.

     Valid attribute names for ATTR-NAMES are: type, link-number,
     user-id, group-id, access-time, modification-time,
     status-change-time, size, modes, inode-number and device-number.

          (file-attributes ".") ⇒ (t 1 1000 1000 (25329 18215 325481 96000) (25325 15364 530263 840000) (25325 15364 530263 840000) 788 "drwxr-xr-x" t 137819 40)
          (file-attribute-collect (file-attributes ".") 'type 'modes
          'inode-number) ⇒ (t "drwxr-xr-x" 137819)

2.2.2 Extended Definitions
--------------------------

These functions must be called explicitly via ‘compat-call’, since their
calling convention or behavior was extended in Emacs 26.1:

 -- Function: compat-call make-temp-file prefix &optional dir-flag
          suffix text
     This function creates a temporary file and returns its name.  Emacs
     creates the temporary file’s name by adding to PREFIX some random
     characters that are different in each Emacs job.  The result is
     guaranteed to be a newly created file, containing TEXT if that’s
     given as a string and empty otherwise.  On MS-DOS, this function
     can truncate PREFIX to fit into the 8+3 file-name limits.  If
     PREFIX is a relative file name, it is expanded against
     ‘temporary-file-directory’.

     The compatibility version adds support for handling the optional
     argument TEXT.

          (make-temp-file "foo")
               ⇒ "/tmp/foo232J6v"

     When ‘make-temp-file’ returns, the file has been created and is
     empty.  At that point, you should write the intended contents into
     the file.

     If DIR-FLAG is non-‘nil’, ‘make-temp-file’ creates an empty
     directory instead of an empty file.  It returns the file name, not
     the directory name, of that directory.  *Note (elisp)Directory
     Names::.

     If SUFFIX is non-‘nil’, ‘make-temp-file’ adds it at the end of the
     file name.

     If TEXT is a string, ‘make-temp-file’ inserts it in the file.

     To prevent conflicts among different libraries running in the same
     Emacs, each Lisp program that uses ‘make-temp-file’ should have its
     own PREFIX.  The number added to the end of PREFIX distinguishes
     between the same application running in different Emacs jobs.
     Additional added characters permit a large number of distinct names
     even in one Emacs job.

 -- Function: compat-call assoc key alist &optional testfn
     This function returns the first association for KEY in ALIST,
     comparing KEY against the alist elements using TESTFN if it is a
     function, and ‘equal’ otherwise (*note (elisp)Equality
     Predicates::).  If TESTFN is a function, it is called with two
     arguments: the CAR of an element from ALIST and KEY.  The function
     returns ‘nil’ if no association in ALIST has a CAR equal to KEY, as
     tested by TESTFN.

     *Note (elisp)Association Lists::.

     The compatibility version adds support for handling the optional
     argument TESTFN.

 -- Function: compat-call line-number-at-pos &optional pos absolute
     This function returns the line number in the current buffer
     corresponding to the buffer position POS.  If POS is ‘nil’ or
     omitted, the current buffer position is used.  If ABSOLUTE is
     ‘nil’, the default, counting starts at ‘(point-min)’, so the value
     refers to the contents of the accessible portion of the
     (potentially narrowed) buffer.  If ABSOLUTE is non-‘nil’, ignore
     any narrowing and return

     *Note (elisp)Text Lines::.

     The compatibility version adds support for handling the optional
     argument ABSOLUTE.

 -- Function: compat-call alist-get key alist &optional default remove
          testfn
     *Note (elisp)Association Lists::.  This function is similar to
     ‘assq’.  It finds the first association ‘(KEY . VALUE)’ by
     comparing KEY with ALIST elements, and, if found, returns the VALUE
     of that association.  If no association is found, the function
     returns DEFAULT.  Comparison of KEY against ALIST elements uses the
     function specified by TESTFN, defaulting to ‘eq’.

     *Note (elisp)Association Lists::.

     The compatibility version handles the optional argument TESTFN.  It
     can also be used as a *note Generalized Variables:
     (elisp)generalised variable.

 -- Function: compat-call string-trim-left string &optional regexp
     Remove the leading text that matches REGEXP from STRING.  REGEXP
     defaults to ‘[ \t\n\r]+’.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

     The compatibility version handles the optional argument REGEXP.

 -- Function: compat-call string-trim-right string &optional regexp
     Remove the trailing text that matches REGEXP from STRING.  REGEXP
     defaults to ‘[ \t\n\r]+’.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

     The compatibility version handles the optional argument REGEXP.

 -- Function: compat-call string-trim string &optional trim-left
          trim-right
     Remove the leading text that matches TRIM-LEFT and trailing text
     that matches TRIM-RIGHT from STRING.  Both regexps default to ‘[
     \t\n\r]+’.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

     The compatibility version handles the optional arguments TRIM-LEFT
     and TRIM-RIGHT.

2.2.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------

Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 26.1:

   • The function ‘func-arity’.
   • The function ‘secure-hash-algorithms’.
   • The function ‘gnutls-available-p’.
   • Support for records and record functions.
   • The function ‘mapbacktrace’.
   • The function ‘file-name-case-insensitive-p’.
   • The additional elements of ‘parse-partial-sexp’.
   • The function ‘add-variable-watcher’.
   • The function ‘undo-amalgamate-change-group’.
   • The function ‘char-from-name’
   • Signalling errors when ‘length’ or ‘member’ deal with list cycles.
   • The function ‘frame-list-z-order’.
   • The function ‘frame-restack’.
   • All changes related to ‘display-buffer’.
   • The function ‘window-swap-states’.
   • The function ‘string-version-lessp’.
   • The ‘xdg’ library.
   • The ‘svg’ library (published separately as a :core package).


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Emacs 27.1,  Next: Emacs 28.1,  Prev: Emacs 26.1,  Up: Support

2.3 Emacs 27.1
==============

2.3.1 Added Definitions
-----------------------

The following functions and macros are implemented in Emacs 27.1.  These
functions are made available by Compat on Emacs versions older than
27.1.

 -- Function: major-mode-suspend
     This function works like ‘fundamental-mode’, in that it kills all
     buffer-local variables, but it also records the major mode in
     effect, so that it could subsequently be restored.  This function
     and ‘major-mode-restore’ (described next) are useful when you need
     to put a buffer under some specialized mode other than the one
     Emacs chooses for it automatically, but would also like to be able
     to switch back to the original mode later.

 -- Function: major-mode-restore &optional avoided-modes
     This function restores the major mode recorded by
     ‘major-mode-suspend’.  If no major mode was recorded, this function
     calls ‘normal-mode’, but tries to force it not to choose any modes
     in AVOIDED-MODES, if that argument is non-‘nil’.

 -- Function: ring-resize ring size
     Set the size of RING to SIZE.  If the new size is smaller, then the
     oldest items in the ring are discarded.

 -- Function: minibuffer-history-value
     Return the value of the minibuffer input history list.  If
     MINIBUFFER-HISTORY-VARIABLE points to a buffer-local variable and
     the minibuffer is active, return the buffer-local value for the
     buffer that was current when the minibuffer was activated."

 -- Macro: with-minibuffer-selected-window &rest body
     Execute the forms in BODY from the minibuffer in its original
     window.  When used in a minibuffer window, select the window
     selected just before the minibuffer was activated, and execute the
     forms.

 -- Function: read-char-from-minibuffer prompt &optional chars history
     This function uses the minibuffer to read and return a single
     character.  Optionally, it ignores any input that is not a member
     of CHARS, a list of accepted characters.  The HISTORY argument
     specifies the history list symbol to use; if it is omitted or
     ‘nil’, this function doesn’t use the history.

     If you bind ‘help-form’ to a non-‘nil’ value while calling
     ‘read-char-from-minibuffer’, then pressing ‘help-char’ causes it to
     evaluate ‘help-form’ and display the result.

 -- Function: bignump object
     This predicate tests whether its argument is a large integer, and
     returns ‘t’ if so, ‘nil’ otherwise.  Unlike small integers, large
     integers can be ‘=’ or ‘eql’ even if they are not ‘eq’.

 -- Function: fixnump object
     This predicate tests whether its argument is a small integer, and
     returns ‘t’ if so, ‘nil’ otherwise.  Small integers can be compared
     with ‘eq’.

 -- Special Form: with-suppressed-warnings warnings body...
     In execution, this is equivalent to ‘(progn BODY...)’, but the
     compiler does not issue warnings for the specified conditions in
     BODY.  WARNINGS is an association list of warning symbols and
     function/variable symbols they apply to.  For instance, if you wish
     to call an obsolete function called ‘foo’, but want to suppress the
     compilation warning, say:

          (with-suppressed-warnings ((obsolete foo))
            (foo ...))

 -- Function: proper-list-p object
     This function returns the length of OBJECT if it is a proper list,
     ‘nil’ otherwise (*note (elisp)Cons Cells::).  In addition to
     satisfying ‘listp’, a proper list is neither circular nor dotted.

          (proper-list-p '(a b c)) ⇒ 3
          (proper-list-p '(a b . c)) ⇒ nil

     *Note (elisp)List-related Predicates::.

 -- Function: string-distance string1 string2 &optional bytecompare
     This function returns the _Levenshtein distance_ between the source
     string STRING1 and the target string STRING2.  The Levenshtein
     distance is the number of single-character changes—deletions,
     insertions, or replacements—required to transform the source string
     into the target string; it is one possible definition of the _edit
     distance_ between strings.

     Letter-case of the strings is significant for the computed
     distance, but their text properties are ignored.  If the optional
     argument BYTECOMPARE is non-‘nil’, the function calculates the
     distance in terms of bytes instead of characters.  The byte-wise
     comparison uses the internal Emacs representation of characters, so
     it will produce inaccurate results for multibyte strings that
     include raw bytes (*note (elisp)Text Representations::); make the
     strings unibyte by encoding them (*note (elisp)Explicit Encoding::)
     if you need accurate results with raw bytes.

     *Note (elisp)Text Comparison::.

 -- Macro: ignore-errors body...
     This construct executes BODY, ignoring any errors that occur during
     its execution.  If the execution is without error, ‘ignore-errors’
     returns the value of the last form in BODY; otherwise, it returns
     ‘nil’.

     Here’s the example at the beginning of this subsection rewritten
     using ‘ignore-errors’:

            (ignore-errors (delete-file filename))

     *Note (elisp)Handling Errors::.

 -- Macro: dolist-with-progress-reporter (var count [result])
          reporter-or-message body...
     This is another convenience macro that works the same way as
     ‘dolist’ does, but also reports loop progress using the functions
     described above.  As in ‘dotimes-with-progress-reporter’,
     ‘reporter-or-message’ can be a progress reporter or a string.  You
     can rewrite the previous example with this macro as follows:

          (dolist-with-progress-reporter (k (number-sequence 0 500)) "Collecting
              some mana for Emacs..."  (sit-for 0.01))

     *Note (elisp)Progress::.

 -- Function: flatten-tree tree
     This function returns a “flattened” copy of TREE, that is, a list
     containing all the non-‘nil’ terminal nodes, or leaves, of the tree
     of cons cells rooted at TREE.  Leaves in the returned list are in
     the same order as in TREE.

          (flatten-tree '(1 (2 . 3) nil (4 5 (6)) 7)) ⇒(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)

     *Note (elisp)Building Lists::.

 -- Function: xor condition1 condition2
     This function returns the boolean exclusive-or of CONDITION1 and
     CONDITION2.  That is, ‘xor’ returns ‘nil’ if either both arguments
     are ‘nil’, or both are non-‘nil’.  Otherwise, it returns the value
     of that argument which is non-‘nil’.

     Note that in contrast to ‘or’, both arguments are always evaluated.

     *Note (elisp)Combining Conditions::.

 -- Variable: regexp-unmatchable
     This variable contains a regexp that is guaranteed not to match any
     string at all.  It is particularly useful as default value for
     variables that may be set to a pattern that actually matches
     something.

     *Note (elisp)Regexp Functions::

 -- Function: decoded-time-second time
     Return the SECONDS field of a ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can
     also be used as a *note Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised
     variable.

 -- Function: decoded-time-minute time
     Return the MINUTE field of a ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can
     also be used as a *note Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised
     variable.

 -- Function: decoded-time-hour time
     Return the HOUR field of a ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can also
     be used as a *note Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised
     variable.

 -- Function: decoded-time-day time
     Return the DAY field of a ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can also
     be used as a *note Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised
     variable.

 -- Function: decoded-time-month time
     Return the MONTH field of a ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can
     also be used as a *note Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised
     variable.

 -- Function: decoded-time-year time
     Return the YEAR field of a ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can also
     be used as a *note Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised
     variable.

 -- Function: decoded-time-weekday time
     Return the WEEKDAY field of a ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can
     also be used as a *note Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised
     variable.

 -- Function: decoded-time-dst time
     Return the DST (daylight saving time indicator) field of a
     ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can also be used as a *note
     Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised variable.

 -- Function: decoded-time-zone time
     Return the ZONE field of a ‘decoded-time’ record TIME.  It can also
     be used as a *note Generalized Variables: (elisp)generalised
     variable.

 -- Function: package-get-version
     Return the version number of the package in which this is used.

 -- Function: time-equal-p t1 t2
     This returns ‘t’ if the two time values T1 and T2 are equal.

     *Note (elisp)Time Calculations::.

 -- Function: date-days-in-month year month
     Return the number of days in MONTH in YEAR.  For instance, February
     2020 has 29 days.

     *Note (elisp)Time Calculations::.  This function requires the
     ‘time-date’ feature to be loaded.

 -- Function: date-ordinal-to-time year ordinal
     Convert a YEAR/ORDINAL to the equivalent decoded-time structure.
     ORDINAL is the number of days since the start of the year, with
     January 1st being 1.

     *Note (elisp)Time Calculations::.  This function requires the
     ‘time-date’ feature to be loaded.

 -- User Option: exec-path
     The value of this variable is a list of directories to search for
     programs to run in subprocesses.  Each element is either the name
     of a directory (i.e., a string), or ‘nil’, which stands for the
     default directory (which is the value of ‘default-directory’).
     *Note executable-find: (elisp)Locating Files, for the details of
     this search.

     The value of ‘exec-path’ is used by ‘call-process’ and
     ‘start-process’ when the PROGRAM argument is not an absolute file
     name.

     Generally, you should not modify ‘exec-path’ directly.  Instead,
     ensure that your ‘PATH’ environment variable is set appropriately
     before starting Emacs.  Trying to modify ‘exec-path’ independently
     of ‘PATH’ can lead to confusing results.

     *Note (elisp)Subprocess Creation::.

 -- Function: provided-mode-derived-p mode &rest modes
     This function returns non-‘nil’ if MODE is derived from any of the
     major modes given by the symbols MODES.

 -- Function: file-size-human-readable-iec size
     Human-readable string for SIZE bytes, using IEC prefixes.

 -- Function: make-empty-file filename &optional parents
     This function creates an empty file named FILENAME.  As
     ‘make-directory’, this function creates parent directories if
     PARENTS is non-‘nil’.  If FILENAME already exists, this function
     signals an error.

 -- Function: text-property-search-forward prop &optional value
          predicate not-current
     Search for the next region that has text property PROP set to VALUE
     according to PREDICATE.

     This function is modeled after ‘search-forward’ and friends in that
     it moves point, but it returns a structure that describes the match
     instead of returning it in ‘match-beginning’ and friends.

     If the text property can’t be found, the function returns ‘nil’.
     If it’s found, point is placed at the end of the region that has
     this text property match, and a ‘prop-match’ structure is returned.

     PREDICATE can either be ‘t’ (which is a synonym for ‘equal’), ‘nil’
     (which means “not equal”), or a predicate that will be called with
     two parameters: The first is VALUE, and the second is the value of
     the text property we’re inspecting.

     If NOT-CURRENT, if point is in a region where we have a match, then
     skip past that and find the next instance instead.

     The ‘prop-match’ structure has the following accessors:
     ‘prop-match-beginning’ (the start of the match), ‘prop-match-end’
     (the end of the match), and ‘prop-match-value’ (the value of
     PROPERTY at the start of the match).

     In the examples below, imagine that you’re in a buffer that looks
     like this:

          This is a bold and here's bolditalic and this is the end.

     That is, the “bold” words are the ‘bold’ face, and the “italic”
     word is in the ‘italic’ face.

     With point at the start:

          (while (setq match (text-property-search-forward 'face 'bold t))
            (push (buffer-substring (prop-match-beginning match)
                                    (prop-match-end match))
                  words))

     This will pick out all the words that use the ‘bold’ face.

          (while (setq match (text-property-search-forward 'face nil t))
            (push (buffer-substring (prop-match-beginning match)
                                    (prop-match-end match))
                  words))

     This will pick out all the bits that have no face properties, which
     will result in the list ‘("This is a " "and here's " "and this is
     the end")’ (only reversed, since we used ‘push’).

          (while (setq match (text-property-search-forward 'face nil nil))
            (push (buffer-substring (prop-match-beginning match)
                                    (prop-match-end match))
                  words))

     This will pick out all the regions where ‘face’ is set to
     something, but this is split up into where the properties change,
     so the result here will be ‘("bold" "bold" "italic")’.

     For a more realistic example where you might use this, consider
     that you have a buffer where certain sections represent URLs, and
     these are tagged with ‘shr-url’.

          (while (setq match (text-property-search-forward 'shr-url nil nil))
            (push (prop-match-value match) urls))

     This will give you a list of all those URLs.

     *Note (Property Search)elisp::.

 -- Function: text-property-search-backward prop &optional value
          predicate not-current
     This is just like ‘text-property-search-forward’, but searches
     backward instead.  Point is placed at the beginning of the matched
     region instead of the end, though.

     *Note (Property Search)elisp::.

2.3.2 Extended Definitions
--------------------------

These functions must be called explicitly via ‘compat-call’, since their
calling convention or behavior was extended in Emacs 27.1:

 -- Function: compat-call recenter &optional count redisplay
     This function scrolls the text in the selected window so that point
     is displayed at a specified vertical position within the window.
     It does not move point with respect to the text.

     *Note (elisp)Textual Scrolling::.

     This compatibility version adds support for the optional argument
     REDISPLAY.

 -- Function: compat-call lookup-key keymap key &optional
          accept-defaults
     This function returns the definition of KEY in KEYMAP.  If the
     string or vector KEY is not a valid key sequence according to the
     prefix keys specified in KEYMAP, it must be too long and have extra
     events at the end that do not fit into a single key sequence.  Then
     the value is a number, the number of events at the front of KEY
     that compose a complete key.

     *Note (elisp)Low-Level Key Binding::.

     This compatibility version allows for KEYMAP to be a list of
     keymaps, instead of just a singular keymap.

 -- Macro: compat-call setq-local &rest pairs
     PAIRS is a list of variable and value pairs.  This macro creates a
     buffer-local binding in the current buffer for each of the
     variables, and gives them a buffer-local value.  It is equivalent
     to calling ‘make-local-variable’ followed by ‘setq’ for each of the
     variables.  The variables should be unquoted symbols.

          (setq-local var1 "value1"
                      var2 "value2")

     *Note (elisp)Creating Buffer-Local::.

     This compatibility version allows for more than one variable to be
     set at once, as can be done with ‘setq’.

 -- Function: compat-call regexp-opt strings &optional paren
     This function returns an efficient regular expression that will
     match any of the strings in the list STRINGS.  This is useful when
     you need to make matching or searching as fast as possible—for
     example, for Font Lock mode.

     *Note (elisp)Regexp Functions::.

     The compatibility version of this functions handles the case where
     STRINGS in an empty list.  In that case, a regular expression is
     generated that never matches anything (see ‘regexp-unmatchable’).

 -- Function: compat-call file-size-human-readable file-size &optional
          flavor space unit
     Return a string with a human readable representation of FILE-SIZE.

     The optional second argument FLAVOR controls the units and the
     display format.  If FLAVOR is...

        • ‘si’, each kilobyte is 1000 bytes and the produced suffixes
          are ‘k’, ‘M’, ‘G’, ‘T’, etc.
        • ‘iec’, each kilobyte is 1024 bytes and the produced suffixes
          are ‘KiB’, ‘MiB’, ‘GiB’, ‘TiB’, etc.
        • ‘nil’ or omitted, each kilobyte is 1024 bytes and the produced
          suffixes are ‘k’, ‘M’, ‘G’, ‘T’, etc.

     The compatibility version handles the optional third (SPACE) and
     forth (UNIT) arguments.  The argument SPACE can be a string that is
     placed between the number and the unit.  The argument UNIT
     determines the unit to use.  By default it will be an empty string,
     unless FLAVOR is ‘iec’, in which case it will be ‘B’.

 -- Function: compat-call assoc-delete-all key alist &optional test
     This function is like ‘assq-delete-all’ except that it accepts an
     optional argument TEST, a predicate function to compare the keys in
     ALIST.  If omitted or ‘nil’, TEST defaults to ‘equal’.  As
     ‘assq-delete-all’, this function often modifies the original list
     structure of ALIST.

     *Note (elisp)Association Lists::.

     This compatibility version handles the optional third (TESTFN)
     argument.

 -- Function: compat-call executable-find program &optional remote
     This function searches for the executable file of the named PROGRAM
     and returns the absolute file name of the executable, including its
     file-name extensions, if any.  It returns ‘nil’ if the file is not
     found.  The function searches in all the directories in
     ‘exec-path’, and tries all the file-name extensions in
     ‘exec-suffixes’ (*note (elisp)Subprocess Creation::).

     If REMOTE is non-‘nil’, and ‘default-directory’ is a remote
     directory, PROGRAM is searched on the respective remote host.

     *Note (elisp)Locating Files::.

     This compatibility version adds support to handle the optional
     second (REMOTE) argument.

2.3.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------

Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 27.1:

   • The functions ‘base64url-encode-*’.
   • The function ‘decoded-time-add’.
   • The function ‘decoded-time-set-defaults’.
   • The function ‘time-convert’.
   • The macro ‘benchmark-progn’.
   • Support for ‘condition-case’ to handle t.
   • The function ‘file-system-info’.
   • The function ‘group-name’.
   • The function ‘face-extend-p’ and ‘set-face-extend’.
   • Additional ‘format-spec’ modifiers.
   • Support for additional body forms for
     ‘define-globalized-minor-mode’.
   • The macro ‘with-connection-local-variables’ and related
     functionality.
   • The ‘iso8601’ library.
   • The ‘exif’ library.
   • The ‘image-converter’ library.


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Emacs 28.1,  Next: Emacs 29.1,  Prev: Emacs 27.1,  Up: Support

2.4 Emacs 28.1
==============

2.4.1 Added Definitions
-----------------------

The following functions and macros are implemented in Emacs 28.1.  These
functions are made available by Compat on Emacs versions older than
28.1.

   The ‘defcustom’ type ‘natnum’ introduced in Emacs 28.1 is made
available by Compat.

 -- Function: process-lines-ignore-status program &rest args
     This function is just like ‘process-lines’, but does not signal an
     error if PROGRAM exits with a non-zero exit status.

 -- Function: process-lines-handling-status program status-handler &rest
          args
     Execute PROGRAM with ARGS, returning its output as a list of lines.
     If STATUS-HANDLER is non-nil, it must be a function with one
     argument, which will be called with the exit status of the program
     before the output is collected.  If STATUS-HANDLER is nil, an error
     is signaled if the program returns with a non-zero exit status.

 -- Function: text-quoting-style
     You should not read the value of the variable ‘text-quoting-style’
     directly.  Instead, use this function with the same name to
     dynamically compute the correct quoting style on the current
     terminal in the ‘nil’ case described above.

 -- Function: string-search needle haystack &optional start-pos
     Return the position of the first instance of NEEDLE in HAYSTACK,
     both of which are strings.  If START-POS is non-‘nil’, start
     searching from that position in NEEDLE.  Return ‘nil’ if no match
     was found.  This function only considers the characters in the
     strings when doing the comparison; text properties are ignored.
     Matching is always case-sensitive.

 -- Function: length= sequence length
     Return non-‘nil’ if the length of SEQUENCE is equal to LENGTH.

 -- Function: length< sequence length
     Return non-‘nil’ if SEQUENCE is shorter than LENGTH.  This may be
     more efficient than computing the length of SEQUENCE if SEQUENCE is
     a long list.

 -- Function: length> sequence length
     Return non-‘nil’ if SEQUENCE is longer than LENGTH.

 -- Function: file-name-concat directory &rest components
     Concatenate COMPONENTS to DIRECTORY, inserting a slash before the
     components if DIRECTORY or the preceding component didn’t end with
     a slash.

          (file-name-concat "/tmp" "foo") ⇒ "/tmp/foo"

     A DIRECTORY or components that are ‘nil’ or the empty string are
     ignored—they are filtered out first and do not affect the results
     in any way.

     This is almost the same as using ‘concat’, but DIRNAME (and the
     non-final components) may or may not end with slash characters, and
     this function will not double those characters.

 -- Function: garbage-collect-maybe factor
     Suggest to run garbage collection, if _enough_ data has been
     allocated.  This is determined by the positive numerical argument
     FACTOR, that would proportionally increase the likelihood of
     garbage collection taking place.

     This compatibility function does nothing and ignores any
     suggestion.

 -- Function: string-replace from-string to-string in-string
     This function replaces all occurrences of FROM-STRING with
     TO-STRING in IN-STRING and returns the result.  It may return one
     of its arguments unchanged, a constant string or a new string.
     Case is significant, and text properties are ignored.

 -- Function: always &rest arguments
     This function ignores any ARGUMENTS and returns ‘t’.

     *Note (elisp)Calling Functions::.

 -- Function: make-separator-line &optional length
     Make a string appropriate for usage as a visual separator line.  If
     LENGTH is nil, use the window width.

 -- Function: insert-into-buffer to-buffer &optional start end
     This is like ‘insert-buffer-substring’, but works in the opposite
     direction: The text is copied from the current buffer into
     TO-BUFFER.  The block of text is copied to the current point in
     TO-BUFFER, and point (in that buffer) is advanced to after the end
     of the copied text.  Is ‘start’/‘end’ is ‘nil’, the entire text in
     the current buffer is copied over.

     *Note (elisp)Insertion::.

 -- Function: replace-string-in-region regexp replacement &optional
          start end
     This function replaces all the occurrences of REGEXP with
     REPLACEMENT in the region of buffer text between START and END;
     START defaults to position of point, and END defaults to the last
     accessible position of the buffer.  The search for REGEXP is
     case-sensitive, and REPLACEMENT is inserted without changing its
     letter-case.  The REPLACEMENT string can use the same special
     elements starting with ‘\’ as ‘replace-match’ does.  The function
     returns the number of replaced occurrences, or ‘nil’ if REGEXP is
     not found.  The function preserves the position of point.

          (replace-regexp-in-region "foo[ \t]+bar" "foobar")
     *Note (elisp)Search and Replace::.

 -- Function: replace-regexp-in-string string replacement &optional
          start end
     This function works similarly to ‘replace-regexp-in-region’, but
     searches for, and replaces, literal STRINGs instead of regular
     expressions.

     *Note (elisp)Search and Replace::.

 -- Function: buffer-local-boundp variable buffer
     This returns non-‘nil’ if there’s either a buffer-local binding of
     VARIABLE (a symbol) in buffer BUFFER, or VARIABLE has a global
     binding.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Buffer-Local::.

 -- Macro: with-existing-directory body...
     This macro ensures that ‘default-directory’ is bound to an existing
     directory before executing BODY.  If ‘default-directory’ already
     exists, that’s preferred, and otherwise some other directory is
     used.  This macro can be useful, for instance, when calling an
     external command that requires that it’s running in a directory
     that exists.  The chosen directory is not guaranteed to be
     writable.

     *Note (elisp)Testing Accessibility::.

 -- Macro: dlet (bindings...) forms...
     This special form is like ‘let’, but it binds all variables
     dynamically.  This is rarely useful—you usually want to bind normal
     variables lexically, and special variables (i.e., variables that
     are defined with ‘defvar’) dynamically, and this is what ‘let’
     does.

     ‘dlet’ can be useful when interfacing with old code that assumes
     that certain variables are dynamically bound (*note (elisp)Dynamic
     Binding::), but it’s impractical to ‘defvar’ these variables.
     ‘dlet’ will temporarily make the bound variables special, execute
     the forms, and then make the variables non-special again.

     *Note (elisp)Local Variables::.

 -- Function: ensure-list object
     This function returns OBJECT as a list.  If OBJECT is already a
     list, the function returns it; otherwise, the function returns a
     one-element list containing OBJECT.

     This is usually useful if you have a variable that may or may not
     be a list, and you can then say, for instance:

          (dolist (elem (ensure-list foo))
            (princ elem))

     *Note (elisp)Building Lists::.

 -- Function: string-clean-whitespace string
     Clean up the whitespace in STRING by collapsing stretches of
     whitespace to a single space character, as well as removing all
     whitespace from the start and the end of STRING.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

 -- Function: string-fill string length
     Attempt to Word-wrap STRING so that no lines are longer than
     LENGTH.  Filling is done on whitespace boundaries only.  If there
     are individual words that are longer than LENGTH, these will not be
     shortened.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

 -- Function: string-lines string &optional omit-nulls
     Split STRING into a list of strings on newline boundaries.  If the
     optional argument OMIT-NULLS is non-‘nil’, remove empty lines from
     the results.  Note that this function returns trailing newlines on
     Emacs 28, use ‘compat-call string-lines’ instead if you want
     consistent behavior.

 -- Function: string-pad string length &optional padding start
     Pad STRING to be of the given LENGTH using PADDING as the padding
     character.  PADDING defaults to the space character.  If STRING is
     longer than LENGTH, no padding is done.  If START is ‘nil’ or
     omitted, the padding is appended to the characters of STRING, and
     if it’s non-‘nil’, the padding is prepended to STRING’s characters.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

 -- Function: string-chop-newline string
     Remove the final newline, if any, from STRING.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

 -- Macro: named-let name bindings &rest body
     This special form is a looping construct inspired from the Scheme
     language.  It is similar to ‘let’: It binds the variables in
     BINDINGS, and then evaluates BODY.  However, ‘named-let’ also binds
     NAME to a local function whose formal arguments are the variables
     in BINDINGS and whose body is BODY.  This allows BODY to call
     itself recursively by calling NAME, where the arguments passed to
     NAME are used as the new values of the bound variables in the
     recursive invocation.

     Recursive calls to NAME that occur in _tail positions_ in BODY are
     guaranteed to be optimized as _tail calls_, which means that they
     will not consume any additional stack space no matter how deeply
     the recursion runs.  Such recursive calls will effectively jump to
     the top of the loop with new values for the variables.

     *Note (elisp)Local Variables::.

 -- Function: file-name-with-extension filename extension
     This function returns FILENAME with its extension set to EXTENSION.
     A single leading dot in the EXTENSION will be stripped if there is
     one.  For example:

          (file-name-with-extension "file" "el")
               ⇒ "file.el"
          (file-name-with-extension "file" ".el")
               ⇒ "file.el"
          (file-name-with-extension "file.c" "el")
               ⇒ "file.el"

     Note that this function will error if FILENAME or EXTENSION are
     empty, or if the FILENAME is shaped like a directory (i.e., if
     ‘directory-name-p’ returns non-‘nil’).

     *Note File Name Components: (elisp)File Name Components.

 -- Function: directory-empty-p directory
     This utility function returns ‘t’ if given DIRECTORY is an
     accessible directory and it does not contain any files, i.e., is an
     empty directory.  It will ignore ‘.’ and ‘..’ on systems that
     return them as files in a directory.

     Symbolic links to directories count as directories.  See
     FILE-SYMLINK-P to distinguish symlinks.

     *Note (elisp)Contents of Directories::.

 -- Function: format-prompt prompt default &rest format-args
     Format PROMPT with default value DEFAULT according to the
     ‘minibuffer-default-prompt-format’ variable.

     ‘minibuffer-default-prompt-format’ is a format string (defaulting
     to ‘" (default %s)"’ that says how the “default” bit in prompts
     like ‘"Local filename (default somefile): "’ are to be formatted.

     To allow the users to customize how this is displayed, code that
     prompts the user for a value (and has a default) should look
     something along the lines of this code snippet:

          (read-file-name
           (format-prompt "Local filename" file)
           nil file)

     If FORMAT-ARGS is ‘nil’, PROMPT is used as a literal string.  If
     FORMAT-ARGS is non-‘nil’, PROMPT is used as a format control
     string, and PROMPT and FORMAT-ARGS are passed to ‘format’ (*note
     (elisp)Formatting Strings::).

     ‘minibuffer-default-prompt-format’ can be ‘""’, in which case no
     default values are displayed.

     If DEFAULT is ‘nil’, there is no default value, and therefore no
     “default value” string is included in the result value.  If DEFAULT
     is a non-‘nil’ list, the first element of the list is used in the
     prompt.

     *Note (elisp)Text from Minibuffer::.

 -- Function: thing-at-mouse event thing &optional no-properties
     Mouse-EVENT equivalent of ‘thing-at-point’.  THING can be ‘symbol’,
     ‘list’, ‘sexp’, ‘filename’, ‘url’, ... among other things.

     When NO-PROPERTIES has a non-‘nil’ value, any text properties that
     might have been present in the buffer are stripped away.

 -- Function: bounds-of-thing-at-mouse event thing
     Determine start and end locations for THING at mouse click given by
     EVENT.  Like ‘bounds-of-thing-at-point’, but tries to use the
     position in EVENT where the mouse button is clicked to find the
     thing nearby.

 -- Function: mark-thing-at-mouse click thing
     Activate the region around THING found near the mouse CLICK.

 -- Function: macroexp-file-name
     Return the name of the file in which the code is currently being
     evaluated, or ‘nil’ if it cannot be determined.

 -- Function: macroexp-warn-and-return msg form &optional category
          compile-only arg
     Return code equivalent to ‘form’ labeled with warning ‘msg’.

 -- Macro: with-environment-variables variables body...
     This macro sets the environment variables according to VARIABLES
     temporarily when executing BODY.  The previous values are restored
     when the form finishes.  The argument VARIABLES should be a list of
     pairs of strings of the form ‘(VAR VALUE)’, where VAR is the name
     of the environment variable and VALUE is that variable’s value.

          (with-environment-variables (("LANG" "C")
                                       ("LANGUAGE" "en_US:en"))
            (call-process "ls" nil t))

     *Note System Environment: (elisp)System Environment.

 -- Function: color-dark-p rgb
     Whether RGB is more readable against white than black.  RGB is a
     3-element list (R G B), each component in the range [0,1].  This
     predicate can be used both for determining a suitable (black or
     white) contrast color with RGB as background and as foreground.

 -- Function: color-values-from-color-spec spec
     Convert the textual color specification SPEC to a color triple
     ‘(RED GREEN blue)’.  Each of RED, GREEN and ‘blue’ is a integer
     value between 0 and 65535.

     The specification SPEC can be one of the following
        • ‘#RGB’, where R, G and B are hex numbers of equal length, 1-4
          digits each.
        • ‘rgb:R/G/B’, where R, G, and B are hex numbers, 1-4 digits
          each.
        • ‘rgbi:R/G/B’, where R, G and B are floating-point numbers in
          [0,1].

 -- Function: file-modes-number-to-symbolic modes
     This function converts a numeric file mode specification in MODES
     into the equivalent symbolic form.

     *Note Changing Files: (elisp)Changing Files.

 -- Function: file-backup-file-names filename
     This function returns a list of all the backup file names for
     FILENAME, or ‘nil’ if there are none.  The files are sorted by
     modification time, descending, so that the most recent files are
     first.

     *Note (elisp)Backup Names::.

 -- Function: make-lock-file-name filename
     Return a string containing a lock file name for FILENAME, obeying
     ‘lock-file-name-transforms’.

 -- Function: decoded-time-period time
     Interpret TIME as a period and return its length in seconds.  For
     computational purposes, years are 365 days long and months are 30
     days long.

 -- Function: subr-primitive-p object
     Return ‘t’ if OBJECT is a primitive, built-in function.  On systems
     with native compilation ‘subrp’ does not distinguish between
     built-in functions and functions that have been compiled.  If
     native compilation is not available, this function behaves
     identically to ‘subrp’.

 -- Function: subr-native-elisp-p object
     Return ‘t’ if OBJECT if the object is native compiled lisp.  If
     native compilation is not available, this function always returns
     ‘nil’.

 -- Function: native-comp-available-p
     This function returns non-‘nil’ if the running Emacs process has
     the native-compilation support compiled into it.  On systems that
     load ‘libgccjit’ dynamically, it also makes sure that library is
     available and can be loaded.  Lisp programs that need to know up
     front whether native-compilation is available should use this
     predicate.

 -- Macro: with-window-non-dedicated window &rest body
     Evaluate BODY with WINDOW temporarily made non-dedicated.  If
     WINDOW is nil, use the selected window.  Return the value of the
     last form in BODY.

2.4.2 Extended Definitions
--------------------------

These functions must be called explicitly via ‘compat-call’, since their
calling convention or behavior was extended in Emacs 28.1:

 -- Function: compat-call string-width string &optional from to
     This function returns the width in columns of the string STRING, if
     it were displayed in the current buffer and the selected window.
     Optional arguments FROM and TO specify the substring of STRING to
     consider, and are interpreted as in ‘substring’ (*note
     (elisp)Creating Strings::).

     The return value is an approximation: it only considers the values
     returned by ‘char-width’ for the constituent characters, always
     takes a tab character as taking ‘tab-width’ columns, ignores
     display properties and fonts, etc.

     *Note (elisp)Size of Displayed Text::.

     This compatibility version handles the optional arguments FROM and
     TO.

 -- Function: compat-call count-windows
     Return the number of live windows on the selected frame.

     The optional argument MINIBUF specifies whether the minibuffer
     window is included in the count.

     If ALL-FRAMES is non-‘nil’, count the windows in all frames instead
     just the selected frame.

     This compatibility version handles the optional argument
     ALL-FRAMES.

2.4.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------

Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 28.1:

   • Support for ‘interactive’ or ‘declare’ to list applicable modes.
   • Support for ‘:interactive’ argument to ‘define-minor-mode’ and
     ‘define-derived-mode’.
   • Support for ‘:predicate’ argument to
     ‘define-globalized-minor-mode’.
   • Support for the ‘:success’ handler of ‘condition-case’.
   • The function ‘benchmark-call’.
   • Additional Edebug keywords.
   • The libjansson JSON APIs, e.g., ‘json-parse-string’.
   • The macro ‘pcase-setq’.
   • The function ‘custom-add-choice’.
   • The functions ‘dom-print’ and ‘dom-remove-attribute’.
   • The function ‘dns-query-asynchronous’.
   • The function ‘get-locale-names’.
   • The functions ‘mail-header-parse-addresses-lax’ and
     ‘mail-header-parse-address-lax’.
   • The function ‘num-processors’.
   • The function ‘object-intervals’.
   • The function ‘require-theme’.
   • The function ‘syntax-class-to-char’.
   • The function ‘path-separator’.
   • The function ‘null-device’.
   • The function ‘macroexp-compiling-p’.
   • The function ‘split-string-shell-command’.
   • The function ‘string-limit’.
   • The functions ‘innermost-minibuffer-p’ and
     ‘minibuffer-innermost-command-loop-p’.
   • The function ‘max-mini-window-lines’.
   • The function ‘lock-file’ and ‘unlock-file’.
   • The ‘multisession’ library.


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Emacs 29.1,  Prev: Emacs 28.1,  Up: Support

2.5 Emacs 29.1
==============

2.5.1 Added Definitions
-----------------------

The following functions and macros are implemented in Emacs 29.1.  These
functions are made available by Compat on Emacs versions older than
29.1.  Note that due to upstream changes, it might happen that there
will be the need for changes, so use these functions with care.

   The ‘defcustom’ type ‘key’ introduced in Emacs 29.1 is made available
by Compat.

 -- Variable: lisp-directory
     This variable holds a string naming the directory which holds
     Emacs’s own ‘*.el’ and ‘*.elc’ files.  This is usually the place
     where those files are located in the Emacs installation tree,
     unless Emacs is run from its build directory in which case it
     points to the ‘lisp’ subdirectory in the source directory from
     which Emacs was built.

 -- Function: count-sentences start end
     Count sentences in current buffer from START to END.

 -- Function: readablep object
     This predicate says whether OBJECT has “readable syntax”, i.e., it
     can be written out and then read back by the Emacs Lisp reader.  If
     it can’t, this function returns ‘nil’; if it can, this function
     returns a printed representation (via ‘prin1’).

 -- Function: substitute-quotes string
     This function works like ‘substitute-command-keys’, but only
     replaces quote characters.

 -- Function: get-scratch-buffer-create
     Return the *scratch* buffer, creating a new one if needed.

 -- Function: use-region-noncontiguous-p
     Return non-nil for a non-contiguous region if ‘use-region-p’.

 -- Function: use-region-end
     Return the end of the region if ‘use-region-p’.

 -- Function: use-region-beginning
     Return the start of the region if ‘use-region-p’.

 -- Macro: buffer-local-set-state variable value...
     Minor modes often set buffer-local variables that affect some
     features in Emacs.  When a minor mode is switched off, the mode is
     expected to restore the previous state of these variables.  This
     convenience macro helps with doing that: It works much like
     ‘setq-local’, but returns an object that can be used to restore
     these values back to their previous values/states (using the
     companion function ‘buffer-local-restore-state’).

 -- Function: delete-line
     Delete the current line.

 -- Function: list-of-strings-p object
     Return ‘t’ if OBJECT is ‘nil’ or a list of strings.

 -- Function: plistp object
     Non-nil if and only if OBJECT is a valid plist.

 -- Macro: with-memoization PLACE CODE...
     This macro provides a simple way to do memoization.  CODE is
     evaluated and then stashed in PLACE.  If PLACE’s value is
     non-‘nil’, return that value instead of evaluating CODE.

 -- Special Form: with-restriction start end [:label label] body
     This special form saves the current bounds of the accessible
     portion of the buffer, sets the accessible portion to start at
     START and end at END, evaluates the BODY forms, and restores the
     saved bounds.  In that case it is equivalent to

          (save-restriction
            (narrow-to-region start end)
            body)

     When the optional argument LABEL, a symbol, is present, the
     narrowing is “labeled”.  A labeled narrowing differs from a
     non-labeled one in several ways:

        • During the evaluation of the BODY form, ‘narrow-to-region’ and
          ‘widen’ can be used only within the START and END limits.

        • To lift the restriction introduced by ‘with-restriction’ and
          gain access to other portions of the buffer, use
          ‘without-restriction’ with the same LABEL argument.  (Another
          way to gain access to other portions of the buffer is to use
          an indirect buffer (*note (elisp)Indirect Buffers::).)

        • Labeled narrowings can be nested.

        • Labeled narrowings can only be used in Lisp programs: they are
          never visible on display, and never interfere with narrowings
          set by the user.

     If you use ‘with-restriction’ with the optional LABEL argument, we
     recommend documenting the LABEL in the doc strings of the functions
     which use it, so that other Lisp programs your code calls could
     lift the labeled narrowing if and when it needs.

 -- Special Form: without-restriction [:label label] body
     This special form saves the current bounds of the accessible
     portion of the buffer, widens the buffer, evaluates the BODY forms,
     and restores the saved bounds.  In that case it is equivalent to

          (save-restriction
            (widen)
            body)

     When the optional argument LABEL is present, the narrowing set by
     ‘with-restriction’ with the same LABEL argument is lifted.

 -- Function: pos-bol &optional count
     Like ‘line-beginning-position’, but ignores fields (and is more
     efficient).

 -- Function: pos-eol &optional count
     Like ‘line-end-position’, but ignores fields (and is more
     efficient).

 -- Macro: with-delayed-message (timeout message) body...
     Sometimes it’s unclear whether an operation will take a long time
     to execute or not, or it can be inconvenient to implement a
     progress reporter.  This macro can be used in those situations.

          (with-delayed-message (2 (format "Gathering data for %s" entry))
            (setq data (gather-data entry)))

     In this example, if the body takes more than two seconds to
     execute, the message will be displayed.  If it takes a shorter time
     than that, the message won’t be displayed.  In either case, the
     body is evaluated as normally, and the return value of the final
     element in the body is the return value of the macro.

     The MESSAGE element is evaluated before BODY, and is always
     evaluated, whether the message is displayed or not.

 -- Function: funcall-with-delayed-message timeout message function
     Like ‘funcall’, but display MESSAGE if FUNCTION takes longer than
     TIMEOUT.  TIMEOUT is a number of seconds, and can be an integer or
     a floating point number.

     If FUNCTION takes less time to execute than TIMEOUT seconds,
     MESSAGE is not displayed.

 -- Function: buttonize string callback &optional data help-echo
     Sometimes it’s more convenient to make a string into a button
     without inserting it into a buffer immediately, for instance when
     creating data structures that may then, later, be inserted into a
     buffer.  This function makes STRING into such a string, and
     CALLBACK will be called when the user clicks on the button.  The
     optional DATA parameter will be used as the parameter when CALLBACK
     is called.  If ‘nil’, the button is used as the parameter instead.

 -- Function: buttonize-region start end callback &optional data
          help-echo
     Make the region between START and END into a button.  When clicked,
     CALLBACK will be called with the DATA as the function argument.  If
     DATA isn’t present (or is nil), the button itself will be used
     instead as the function argument.  If HELP-ECHO, use that as the
     help-echo property.

 -- Function: get-display-property position prop &optional object
          properties
     This convenience function can be used to get a specific display
     property, no matter whether the ‘display’ property is a vector, a
     list or a simple property.  This is like ‘get-text-property’ (*note
     Examining Properties: (elisp)Examining Properties.), but works on
     the ‘display’ property only.

     POSITION is the position in the buffer or string to examine, and
     PROP is the ‘display’ property to return.  The optional OBJECT
     argument should be either a string or a buffer, and defaults to the
     current buffer.  If the optional PROPERTIES argument is non-‘nil’,
     it should be a ‘display’ property, and in that case, POSITION and
     OBJECT are ignored.  (This can be useful if you’ve already gotten
     the ‘display’ property with ‘get-char-property’, for instance
     (*note Examining Properties: (elisp)Examining Properties.).

 -- Function: add-display-text-property start end prop value &optional
          object
     Add display property PROP with VALUE to the text from START to END.
     If any text in the region has a non-nil ‘display’ property, those
     properties are retained.

     If OBJECT is non-‘nil’, it should be a string or a buffer.  If
     ‘nil’, this defaults to the current buffer.

 -- Function: take n list
     This function returns the N first elements of LIST.  Essentially,
     it returns the part of LIST that ‘nthcdr’ skips.

     ‘take’ returns LIST if shorter than N elements; it returns ‘nil’ if
     N is zero or negative.

          (take 3 '(a b c d))
               ⇒ (a b c)
          (take 10 '(a b c d))
               ⇒ (a b c d)
          (take 0 '(a b c d))
               ⇒ nil

 -- Function: ntake n list
     This is a version of ‘take’ that works by destructively modifying
     the list structure of the argument.  That makes it faster, but the
     original value of LIST may be lost.

     ‘ntake’ returns LIST unmodified if shorter than N elements; it
     returns ‘nil’ if N is zero or negative.  Otherwise, it returns LIST
     truncated to its first N elements.

     This means that it is usually a good idea to use the return value
     and not just rely on the truncation effect unless N is known to be
     positive.

 -- Function: compiled-function-p object
     This function returns ‘t’ if OBJECT is a function object that is
     not in the form of ELisp source code but something like machine
     code or byte code instead.  More specifically it returns ‘t’ if the
     function is built-in, or byte-compiled, or natively-compiled, or a
     function loaded from a dynamic module.

 -- Function: function-alias-p object &optional noerror
     Checks whether OBJECT is a function alias.  If it is, it returns a
     list of symbols representing the function alias chain, else ‘nil’.
     For instance, if ‘a’ is an alias for ‘b’, and ‘b’ is an alias for
     ‘c’:

          (function-alias-p 'a)
              ⇒ (b c)

     If there’s a loop in the definitions, an error will be signalled.
     If NOERROR is non-‘nil’, the non-looping parts of the chain is
     returned instead.

 -- Function: string-equal-ignore-case string1 string2
     ‘string-equal-ignore-case’ compares strings ignoring case
     differences, like ‘char-equal’ when ‘case-fold-search’ is ‘t’.

     *Note (elisp)Text Comparison::.

 -- Function: string-split string &optional separators omit-nulls trim
     ‘string-split’ is an alias for the function ‘split-string’.  The
     name follows the convention of other string functions.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

 -- Function: buffer-match-p condition buffer-or-name &optional arg
     This function checks if a buffer designated by ‘buffer-or-name’
     satisfies a ‘condition’.  Optional third argument ARG is passed to
     the predicate function in CONDITION.  A condition can be one of the
     following:
        • A string, interpreted as a regular expression.  The buffer
          satisfies the condition if the regular expression matches the
          buffer name.
        • A predicate function, which should return non-‘nil’ if the
          buffer matches.  If the function expects one argument, it is
          called with BUFFER-OR-NAME as the argument; if it expects 2
          arguments, the first argument is BUFFER-OR-NAME and the second
          is ARG (or ‘nil’ if ARG is omitted).
        • A cons-cell ‘(OPER . EXPR)’ where OPER is one of
          ‘not’
               Satisfied if EXPR doesn’t satisfy ‘buffer-match-p’ with
               the same buffer and ‘arg’.
          ‘or’
               Satisfied if EXPR is a list and _any_ condition in EXPR
               satisfies ‘buffer-match-p’, with the same buffer and
               ‘arg’.
          ‘and’
               Satisfied if EXPR is a list and _all_ conditions in EXPR
               satisfy ‘buffer-match-p’, with the same buffer and ‘arg’.
          ‘derived-mode’
               Satisfied if the buffer’s major mode derives from EXPR.
          ‘major-mode’
               Satisfied if the buffer’s major mode is equal to EXPR.
               Prefer using ‘derived-mode’ instead when both can work.
        • t Satisfied by any buffer.  A convenient alternative to ‘""’
          (empty string), ‘(and)’ (empty conjunction) or ‘always’.

     *Note (elisp)Buffer List::.

 -- Function: match-buffers condition &optional buffers arg
     This function returns a list of all buffers that satisfy a
     ‘condition’, as defined for ‘buffer-match-p’.  By default all
     buffers are considered, but this can be restricted via the second
     optional ‘buffer-list’ argument.  Optional third argument ARG will
     be used by CONDITION in the same way as ‘buffer-match-p’ does.

     *Note (elisp)Buffer List::.

 -- Function: string-glyph-split string
     When character compositions are in effect, sequence of characters
     can be composed for display to form _grapheme clusters_, for
     example to display accented characters, or ligatures, or Emoji, or
     when complex text shaping requires that for some scripts.  When
     that happens, characters no longer map in a simple way to display
     columns, and display layout decisions with such strings, such as
     truncating too wide strings, can be a complex job.  This function
     helps in performing suvh jobs: it splits up its argument STRING
     into a list of substrings, where each substring produces a single
     grapheme cluster that should be displayed as a unit.  Lisp programs
     can then use this list to construct visually-valid substrings of
     STRING which will look correctly on display, or compute the width
     of any substring of STRING by adding the width of its constituents
     in the returned list, etc.

     For instance, if you want to display a string without the first
     glyph, you can say:

          (apply #'insert (cdr (string-glyph-split string))))

     *Note (elisp)Size of Displayed Text::.

 -- Macro: with-buffer-unmodified-if-unchanged &rest body...
     Evaluate BODY like ‘progn’, but change buffer-modified status only
     if buffer text changes.  If the buffer was unmodified before
     execution of BODY, and buffer text after execution of BODY is
     identical to what it was before, ensure that buffer is still marked
     unmodified afterwards.

     Note that only changes in the raw byte sequence of the buffer text,
     as stored in the internal representation, are monitored for the
     purpose of detecting the lack of changes in buffer text.  Any other
     changes that are normally perceived as "buffer modifications", such
     as changes in text properties, ‘buffer-file-coding-system’, buffer
     multibyteness, etc.  – will not be noticed, and the buffer will
     still be marked unmodified, effectively ignoring those changes.

 -- Function: file-attribute-file-identifier
     Return the fields ‘(inodenum device)’ as a list from attributes
     generated by ‘file-attributes’.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: file-name-split filename
     This function splits a file name into its components, and can be
     thought of as the inverse of ‘string-join’ with the appropriate
     directory separator.  For example,

          (file-name-split "/tmp/foo.txt")
              ⇒ ("" "tmp" "foo.txt")
          (string-join (file-name-split "/tmp/foo.txt") "/")
              ⇒ "/tmp/foo.txt"

 -- Function: file-name-parent-directory filename
     This function returns the directory name of the parent directory of
     FILENAME.  If FILENAME is at the root directory of the filesystem,
     it returns ‘nil’.  A relative FILENAME is assumed to be relative to
     ‘default-directory’, and the return value will also be relative in
     that case.  If the return value is non-‘nil’, it ends in a slash.

     *Note (elisp)Directory Names::.

 -- Function: file-has-changed-p file &optional tag
     This function returns non-‘nil’ if the time stamp of FILENAME has
     changed since the last call.  When called for the first time for
     some FILENAME, it records the last modification time and size of
     the file, and returns non-‘nil’ when FILENAME exists.  Thereafter,
     when called for the same FILENAME, it compares the current time
     stamp and size with the recorded ones, and returns non-‘nil’ only
     if either the time stamp or the size (or both) are different.  This
     is useful when a Lisp program wants to re-read a file whenever it
     changes.  With an optional argument TAG, which must be a symbol,
     the size and modification time comparisons are limited to calls
     with the same tag.

     *Note (elisp)File Attributes::.

 -- Function: directory-abbrev-make-regexp directory
     Create a regexp to match DIRECTORY for ‘directory-abbrev-alist’.

 -- Function: directory-abbrev-apply filename
     Apply the abbreviations in ‘directory-abbrev-alist’ to FILENAME.
     Note that when calling this, you should set ‘case-fold-search’ as
     appropriate for the filesystem used for FILENAME.

 -- Function: key-valid-p keys
     Say whether KEYS is a valid key.  A key is a string consisting of
     one or more key strokes.  The key strokes are separated by single
     space characters.

     Each key stroke is either a single character, or the name of an
     event, surrounded by angle brackets.  In addition, any key stroke
     may be preceded by one or more modifier keys.  Finally, a limited
     number of characters have a special shorthand syntax.

     Here’s some example key sequences.

     ‘f’
          The key ‘f’.
     ‘S o m’
          A three key sequence of the keys ‘S’, ‘o’ and ‘m’.
     ‘C-c o’
          A two key sequence of the keys ‘c’ with the control modifier
          and then the key ‘o’.
     ‘H-<left>’
          The key named "left" with the hyper modifier.
     ‘M-RET’
          The "return" key with a meta modifier.
     ‘C-M-<space>’
          The "space" key with both the control and meta modifiers.

     These are the characters that have shorthand syntax: ‘NUL’, ‘RET’,
     ‘TAB’, ‘LFD’, ‘ESC’, ‘SPC’, ‘DEL’.

     Modifiers have to be specified in this order
     Alt (A)-Control (C)-Hyper (H)-Meta (M)-Shift (s)-Super (s)

 -- Function: key-parse keys
     Convert KEYS to the internal Emacs key representation.  See
     ‘key-valid-p’ for a description of valid key sequences.  Examples
     include ‘f’, ‘C-c C-c’, ‘H-<left>’, ‘M-RET’ or ‘C-M-<return>’.

 -- Function: keymap-set keymap key definition
     This function sets the binding for KEY in KEYMAP.  (If KEY is more
     than one event long, the change is actually made in another keymap
     reached from KEYMAP.)  The argument BINDING can be any Lisp object,
     but only certain types are meaningful.  (For a list of meaningful
     types, see *note (elisp)Key Lookup::.)  The value returned by
     ‘keymap-set’ is BINDING.

     If KEY is ‘<t>’, this sets the default binding in KEYMAP.  When an
     event has no binding of its own, the Emacs command loop uses the
     keymap’s default binding, if there is one.

     Every prefix of KEY must be a prefix key (i.e., bound to a keymap)
     or undefined; otherwise an error is signaled.  If some prefix of
     KEY is undefined, then ‘keymap-set’ defines it as a prefix key so
     that the rest of KEY can be defined as specified.

     If there was previously no binding for KEY in KEYMAP, the new
     binding is added at the beginning of KEYMAP.  The order of bindings
     in a keymap makes no difference for keyboard input, but it does
     matter for menu keymaps (*note (elisp)Menu Keymaps::).

     *Note (elisp)Changing Key Bindings::.

 -- Function: keymap-global-set key command
     This function sets the binding of KEY in the current global map to
     BINDING.

          (keymap-global-set KEY BINDING)
          ≡
          (keymap-set (current-global-map) KEY BINDING)

     *Note (elisp)Key Binding Commands::.

 -- Function: keymap-local-set key command
     This function sets the binding of KEY in the current local keymap
     to BINDING.

          (keymap-local-set KEY BINDING)
          ≡
          (keymap-set (current-local-map) KEY BINDING)

     *Note (elisp)Key Binding Commands::.

 -- Function: keymap-global-unset key &optional remove
     This function removes the binding of KEY from the current global
     map.

     One use of this function is in preparation for defining a longer
     key that uses KEY as a prefix—which would not be allowed if KEY has
     a non-prefix binding.  For example:

          (keymap-global-unset "C-l")
              ⇒ nil
          (keymap-global-set "C-l C-l" 'redraw-display)
              ⇒ nil

     *Note (elisp)Key Binding Commands::.

 -- Function: keymap-local-unset key &optional remove
     This function removes the binding of KEY from the current local
     map.

     *Note (elisp)Key Binding Commands::.

 -- Function: keymap-substitute keymap olddef newdef &optional oldmap
          prefix
     Replace OLDDEF with NEWDEF for any keys in KEYMAP now defined as
     OLDDEF.  In other words, OLDDEF is replaced with NEWDEF wherever it
     appears.  Alternatively, if optional fourth argument OLDMAP is
     specified, we redefine in KEYMAP as NEWDEF those keys that are
     defined as OLDDEF in OLDMAP.

 -- Function: keymap-lookup keymap key &optional accept-default no-remap
          position
     This function returns the definition of KEY in KEYMAP.  All the
     other functions described in this chapter that look up keys use
     ‘keymap-lookup’.  Here are examples:

          (keymap-lookup (current-global-map) "C-x C-f")
              ⇒ find-file
          (keymap-lookup (current-global-map) "C-x C-f 1 2 3 4 5")
              ⇒ 2

     *Note (elisp)Functions for Key Lookup::.

 -- Function: keymap-local-lookup keys &optional accept-default
     Like ‘keymap-lookup’, but restricting the search for commands bound
     to KEYS to the current local keymap.

 -- Function: keymap-global-lookup keys &optional accept-default
     Like ‘keymap-lookup’, but restricting the search for commands bound
     to KEYS to the current global keymap.

 -- Function: define-keymap &rest definitions
     You can create a keymap with the functions described above, and
     then use ‘keymap-set’ (*note (elisp)Changing Key Bindings::) to
     specify key bindings in that map.  When writing modes, however, you
     frequently have to bind a large number of keys at once, and using
     ‘keymap-set’ on them all can be tedious and error-prone.  Instead
     you can use ‘define-keymap’, which creates a keymap and binds a
     number of keys.  Here’s a very basic example:

          (define-keymap
            "n" #'forward-line
            "f" #'previous-line
            "C-c C-c" #'quit-window)

     This function creates a new sparse keymap, defines the keystrokes
     in PAIRS, and returns the new keymap.

     PAIRS is a list of alternating key bindings and key definitions, as
     accepted by ‘keymap-set’.  In addition, the key can be the special
     symbol ‘:menu’, in which case the definition should be a menu
     definition as accepted by ‘easy-menu-define’ (*note (elisp)Easy
     Menu::).  Here’s a brief example of this usage:

          (define-keymap :full t
            "g" #'eww-reload
            :menu '("Eww"
                    ["Exit" quit-window t]
                    ["Reload" eww-reload t]))

     A number of keywords can be used before the key/definition pairs to
     change features of the new keymap.  If any of the feature keywords
     is missing from the ‘define-keymap’ call, the default value for
     that feature is ‘nil’.  Here’s a list of the available feature
     keywords:

     ‘:full’
          If non-‘nil’, create a char-table keymap (as from
          ‘make-keymap’) instead of a sparse keymap (as from
          ‘make-sparse-keymap’ (*note (elisp)Creating Keymaps::).  A
          sparse keymap is the default.

     ‘:parent’
          If non-‘nil’, the value should be a keymap to use as the
          parent (*note (elisp)Inheritance and Keymaps::).

     ‘:keymap’
          If non-‘nil’, the value should be a keymap.  Instead of
          creating a new keymap, the specified keymap is modified
          instead.

     ‘:suppress’
          If non-‘nil’, the keymap will be suppressed with
          ‘suppress-keymap’ (*note (elisp)Changing Key Bindings::).  By
          default, digits and the minus sign are exempt from
          suppressing, but if the value is ‘nodigits’, this suppresses
          digits and minus-sign like it does with other characters.

     ‘:name’
          If non-‘nil’, the value should be a string to use as the menu
          for the keymap if you use it as a menu with ‘x-popup-menu’
          (*note (elisp)Pop-Up Menus::).

     ‘:prefix’
          If non-‘nil’, the value should be a symbol to be used as a
          prefix command (*note (elisp)Prefix Keys::).  If this is the
          case, this symbol is returned by ‘define-keymap’ instead of
          the map itself.

 -- Function: defvar-keymap (variable-name &rest defs)
     By far, the most common thing to do with a keymap is to bind it to
     a variable.  This is what virtually all modes do—a mode called
     ‘foo’ almost always has a variable called ‘foo-mode-map’.

     This macro defines NAME as a variable, passes OPTIONS and PAIRS to
     ‘define-keymap’, and uses the result as the default value for the
     variable.

     OPTIONS is like the keywords in ‘define-keymap’, but there’s an
     additional ‘:doc’ keyword that provides the doc string for the
     defined variable.

     Here’s an example:

          (defvar-keymap eww-textarea-map
            :parent text-mode-map
            "RET" #'forward-line
            "TAB" #'shr-next-link)

 -- Macro: while-let spec then-forms...
     Like ‘when-let’, but repeat until a binding in SPEC is ‘nil’.  The
     return value is always ‘nil’.

     This is comparable to ‘and-let*’.

 -- Macro: ert-with-temp-file name &rest body
     Bind NAME to the name of a new temporary file and evaluate BODY.
     Delete the temporary file after BODY exits normally or non-locally.
     NAME will be bound to the file name of the temporary file.  See the
     docstring for supported keyword arguments.

 -- Macro: ert-with-temp-directory name &rest body
     Bind NAME to the name of a new temporary directory and evaluate
     BODY.  Delete the temporary directory after BODY exits normally or
     non-locally.

     NAME is bound to the directory name, not the directory file name.
     (In other words, it will end with the directory delimiter; on
     Unix-like systems, it will end with "/".)

     The same keyword arguments are supported as in ‘ert-with-temp-file’
     (which see), except for ‘:text’.

 -- Function: cl-constantly value
     Return a function that takes any number of arguments, but returns
     VALUE.

 -- Macro: cl-with-gensyms names... body
     This macro expands to code that executes BODY with each of the
     variables in NAMES bound to a fresh uninterned symbol, or “gensym”,
     in Common Lisp parlance.  For macros requiring more than one
     gensym, use of ‘cl-with-gensyms’ shortens the code and renders
     one’s intentions clearer.  Compare:

          (defmacro my-macro (foo)
            (let ((bar (gensym "bar"))
                  (baz (gensym "baz"))
                  (quux (gensym "quux")))
              `(let ((,bar (+ ...)))
                 ...)))

          (defmacro my-macro (foo)
            (cl-with-gensyms (bar baz quux)
              `(let ((,bar (+ ...)))
                 ...)))

 -- Macro: cl-once-only ((variable form)...) body
     This macro is primarily to help the macro programmer ensure that
     forms supplied by the user of the macro are evaluated just once by
     its expansion even though the result of evaluating the form is to
     occur more than once.  Less often, this macro is used to ensure
     that forms supplied by the macro programmer are evaluated just
     once.

     Each VARIABLE may be used to refer to the result of evaluating FORM
     in BODY.  ‘cl-once-only’ binds each VARIABLE to a fresh uninterned
     symbol during the evaluation of BODY.  Then, ‘cl-once-only’ wraps
     the final expansion in code to evaluate each FORM and bind the
     result to the corresponding uninterned symbol.  Thus, when the
     macro writer substitutes the value for VARIABLE into the expansion
     they are effectively referring to the result of evaluating FORM,
     rather than FORM itself.  Another way to put this is that each
     VARIABLE is bound to an expression for the (singular) result of
     evaluating FORM.

     The most common case is where VARIABLE is one of the arguments to
     the macro being written, so ‘(variable variable)’ may be
     abbreviated to just ‘variable’.

     For example, consider this macro:

          (defmacro my-list (x y &rest forms)
            (let ((x-result (gensym))
                  (y-result (gensym)))
              `(let ((,x-result ,x)
                     (,y-result ,y))
                 (list ,x-result ,y-result ,x-result ,y-result
                       (progn ,@forms))))

     In a call like ‘(my-list (pop foo) ...)’ the intermediate binding
     to ‘x-result’ ensures that the ‘pop’ is not done twice.  But as a
     result the code is rather complex: the reader must keep track of
     how ‘x-result’ really just means the first parameter of the call to
     the macro, and the required use of multiple gensyms to avoid
     variable capture by ‘(progn ,@forms)’ obscures things further.
     ‘cl-once-only’ takes care of these details:

          (defmacro my-list (x y &rest forms)
            (cl-once-only (x y)
              `(list ,x ,y ,x ,y
                     (progn ,@forms))))

2.5.2 Extended Definitions
--------------------------

These functions must be called explicitly via ‘compat-call’, since their
calling convention or behavior was extended in Emacs 29.1:

 -- Function: compat-call set-transient-map keymap &optional keep-pred
          on-exit message timeout
     This function adds KEYMAP as a “transient” keymap, which takes
     precedence over other keymaps for one (or more) subsequent keys.

     Normally, KEYMAP is used just once, to look up the very next key.
     If the optional argument KEEP-PRED is ‘t’, the map stays active as
     long as the user types keys defined in KEYMAP; when the user types
     a key that is not in KEYMAP, the transient keymap is deactivated
     and normal key lookup continues for that key.

     The KEEP-PRED argument can also be a function.  In that case, the
     function is called with no arguments, prior to running each
     command, while KEYMAP is active; it should return non-‘nil’ if
     KEYMAP should stay active.

     The optional argument ON-EXIT, if non-‘nil’, specifies a function
     that is called, with no arguments, after KEYMAP is deactivated.

     The optional argument MESSAGE specifies the message to display
     after activating the transient map.  If MESSAGE is a string, it is
     the format string for the message, and any ‘%k’ specifier in that
     string is replaced with the list of keys from the transient map.
     Any other non-‘nil’ value of MESSAGE stands for the default message
     format ‘Repeat with %k’.

     If the optional argument TIMEOUT is non-‘nil’, it should be a
     number that specifies how many seconds of idle time to wait before
     deactivating KEYMAP.  The value of the variable
     ‘set-transient-map-timeout’, if non-‘nil’, overrides the value of
     this argument.

     This function works by adding and removing KEYMAP from the variable
     ‘overriding-terminal-local-map’, which takes precedence over all
     other active keymaps (*note (Searching Keymaps)elisp::).

 -- Function: compat-call string-lines string &optional omit-nulls
          keep-newlines
     Split STRING into a list of strings on newline boundaries.  If the
     optional argument OMIT-NULLS is non-‘nil’, remove empty lines from
     the results.  If the optional argument KEEP-NEWLINES is non-‘nil’,
     don’t remove the trailing newlines from the result strings.

     *Note (elisp)Creating Strings::.

 -- Function: compat-call define-key
     This function is like ‘keymap-set’ (*note (elisp)Changing Key
     Bindings::, but understands only the legacy key syntaxes.

     In addition, this function also has a REMOVE argument.  If it is
     non-‘nil’, the definition will be removed.  This is almost the same
     as setting the definition to ‘nil’, but makes a difference if the
     KEYMAP has a parent, and KEY is shadowing the same binding in the
     parent.  With REMOVE, subsequent lookups will return the binding in
     the parent, whereas with a ‘nil’ definition the lookups will return
     ‘nil’.

     *Note (elisp)Low-Level Key Binding::.

     This compatibility version handles the optional argument REMOVE.

 -- Function: compat-call plist-get plist prop &optional predicate
     This returns the value of the PROPERTY property stored in the
     property list PLIST.  Comparisons are done with PREDICATE, and
     defaults to ‘eq’.  It accepts a malformed PLIST argument.  If
     PROPERTY is not found in the PLIST, it returns ‘nil’.

     *Note (elisp)Plist Access::.

     This compatibility version handles the optional argument PREDICATE.
     This is a generalized variable (*note (elisp)Generalized
     Variables::) that can be used to change a value with ‘setf’.

 -- Function: compat-call plist-put plist prop val &optional predicate
     This stores VALUE as the value of the PROPERTY property in the
     property list PLIST.  Comparisons are done with PREDICATE, and
     defaults to ‘eq’.  It may modify PLIST destructively, or it may
     construct a new list structure without altering the old.  The
     function returns the modified property list, so you can store that
     back in the place where you got PLIST.

     *Note (elisp)Plist Access::.

     This compatibility version handles the optional argument PREDICATE.

 -- Function: compat-call plist-member plist prop &optional predicate
     This returns non-‘nil’ if PLIST contains the given PROPERTY.
     Comparisons are done with PREDICATE, and defaults to ‘eq’.  Unlike
     ‘plist-get’, this allows you to distinguish between a missing
     property and a property with the value ‘nil’.  The value is
     actually the tail of PLIST whose ‘car’ is PROPERTY.

     *Note (elisp)Plist Access::.

     This compatibility version handles the optional argument PREDICATE.

2.5.3 Missing Definitions
-------------------------

Compat does not provide support for the following Lisp features
implemented in 29.1:

   • The function ‘imagep’.
   • The function ‘image-at-point-p’.
   • The function ‘function-documentation’.
   • The macro ‘with-undo-amalgamate’.
   • The function ‘string-glyph-split’.
   • The function ‘string-limit’.
   • The function ‘string-pixel-width’ and ‘buffer-text-pixel-size’.
   • The function ‘minibuffer-lazy-highlight-setup’.
   • The function ‘pp-emacs-lisp-code’.
   • The functions ‘xdg-state-home’, ‘xdg-current-desktop’ and
     ‘xdg-session-type’.
   • The macro ‘setopt’.
   • The ‘oclosure’ library.
   • The ‘textsec’ library.
   • The ‘range’ library.
   • The ‘string-edit’ library.
   • The ‘vtable’ library.
   • The ‘pixel-fill’ library.


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Development,  Next: Function Index,  Prev: Support,  Up: Top

3 Development
*************

Compat is developed on GitHub.

   Bug reports, patches and comments are best sent to the issue tracker
(https://github.com/emacs-compat/compat/issues).  These may include
issues in the compatibility code, missing definitions or performance
issues.  We also provide a development mailing list
(https://lists.sr.ht/~pkal/compat-devel) (~pkal/compat-devel@lists.sr.ht
<~pkal/compat-devel@lists.sr.ht>).

   Please note that as a GNU ELPA package, Compat requires contributors
to have signed the FSF copyright assignment
(https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Copyright-Assignment.html),
before any non-trivial contribution (roughly 15 lines of code) can be
applied.  It is important that you provide tests when you contribute new
functionality.  Compat has 100% test coverage by the test suite.  We use
continuous integration to check if patches preserve existing
functionality.


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Function Index,  Next: Variable Index,  Prev: Development,  Up: Top

Appendix A Function Index
*************************

 [index ]
* Menu:

* add-display-text-property:             Emacs 29.1.          (line 186)
* alist-get:                             Emacs 25.1.          (line  82)
* always:                                Emacs 28.1.          (line  83)
* and-let*:                              Emacs 26.1.          (line 158)
* assoc-delete-all:                      Emacs 26.1.          (line  13)
* bignump:                               Emacs 27.1.          (line  55)
* bool-vector:                           Emacs 25.1.          (line 178)
* bounds-of-thing-at-mouse:              Emacs 28.1.          (line 292)
* buffer-hash:                           Emacs 26.1.          (line  80)
* buffer-local-boundp:                   Emacs 28.1.          (line 125)
* buffer-local-restore-state:            Emacs 29.1.          (line  50)
* buffer-local-set-state:                Emacs 29.1.          (line  50)
* buffer-match-p:                        Emacs 29.1.          (line 254)
* buttonize:                             Emacs 29.1.          (line 152)
* buttonize-region:                      Emacs 29.1.          (line 161)
* cl-constantly:                         Emacs 29.1.          (line 626)
* cl-once-only:                          Emacs 29.1.          (line 649)
* cl-with-gensyms:                       Emacs 29.1.          (line 630)
* color-dark-p:                          Emacs 28.1.          (line 323)
* color-values-from-color-spec:          Emacs 28.1.          (line 329)
* compat-call:                           Usage.               (line  45)
* compat-call alist-get:                 Emacs 26.1.          (line 344)
* compat-call assoc:                     Emacs 26.1.          (line 316)
* compat-call assoc-delete-all:          Emacs 27.1.          (line 417)
* compat-call count-windows:             Emacs 28.1.          (line 413)
* compat-call define-key:                Emacs 29.1.          (line 746)
* compat-call executable-find:           Emacs 27.1.          (line 429)
* compat-call file-size-human-readable:  Emacs 27.1.          (line 397)
* compat-call line-number-at-pos:        Emacs 26.1.          (line 330)
* compat-call lookup-key:                Emacs 27.1.          (line 356)
* compat-call make-temp-file:            Emacs 26.1.          (line 278)
* compat-call plist-get:                 Emacs 29.1.          (line 762)
* compat-call plist-member:              Emacs 29.1.          (line 786)
* compat-call plist-put:                 Emacs 29.1.          (line 774)
* compat-call recenter:                  Emacs 27.1.          (line 346)
* compat-call regexp-opt:                Emacs 27.1.          (line 385)
* compat-call set-transient-map:         Emacs 29.1.          (line 701)
* compat-call setq-local:                Emacs 27.1.          (line 370)
* compat-call sort:                      Emacs 25.1.          (line 190)
* compat-call string-lines:              Emacs 29.1.          (line 737)
* compat-call string-trim:               Emacs 26.1.          (line 375)
* compat-call string-trim-left:          Emacs 26.1.          (line 359)
* compat-call string-trim-right:         Emacs 26.1.          (line 367)
* compat-call string-width:              Emacs 28.1.          (line 396)
* compat-function:                       Usage.               (line  53)
* compiled-function-p:                   Emacs 29.1.          (line 222)
* count-sentences:                       Emacs 29.1.          (line  25)
* cXXXr:                                 Emacs 26.1.          (line  66)
* cXXXXr:                                Emacs 26.1.          (line  67)
* date-days-in-month:                    Emacs 27.1.          (line 213)
* date-ordinal-to-time:                  Emacs 27.1.          (line 220)
* decoded-time-day:                      Emacs 27.1.          (line 175)
* decoded-time-dst:                      Emacs 27.1.          (line 195)
* decoded-time-hour:                     Emacs 27.1.          (line 170)
* decoded-time-minute:                   Emacs 27.1.          (line 165)
* decoded-time-month:                    Emacs 27.1.          (line 180)
* decoded-time-period:                   Emacs 28.1.          (line 360)
* decoded-time-second:                   Emacs 27.1.          (line 160)
* decoded-time-weekday:                  Emacs 27.1.          (line 190)
* decoded-time-year:                     Emacs 27.1.          (line 185)
* decoded-time-zone:                     Emacs 27.1.          (line 200)
* define-keymap:                         Emacs 29.1.          (line 514)
* defvar-keymap:                         Emacs 29.1.          (line 582)
* delete-line:                           Emacs 29.1.          (line  59)
* directory-abbrev-apply:                Emacs 29.1.          (line 378)
* directory-abbrev-make-regexp:          Emacs 29.1.          (line 375)
* directory-empty-p:                     Emacs 28.1.          (line 243)
* directory-name-p:                      Emacs 25.1.          (line  56)
* dlet:                                  Emacs 28.1.          (line 143)
* dolist-with-progress-reporter:         Emacs 27.1.          (line 119)
* ensure-list:                           Emacs 28.1.          (line 158)
* ert-with-temp-directory:               Emacs 29.1.          (line 614)
* ert-with-temp-file:                    Emacs 29.1.          (line 608)
* file-attribute-access-time:            Emacs 26.1.          (line 223)
* file-attribute-collect:                Emacs 26.1.          (line 260)
* file-attribute-device-number:          Emacs 26.1.          (line 255)
* file-attribute-file-identifier:        Emacs 29.1.          (line 335)
* file-attribute-group-id:               Emacs 26.1.          (line 218)
* file-attribute-inode-number:           Emacs 26.1.          (line 250)
* file-attribute-link-number:            Emacs 26.1.          (line 208)
* file-attribute-modes:                  Emacs 26.1.          (line 245)
* file-attribute-modification-time:      Emacs 26.1.          (line 228)
* file-attribute-size:                   Emacs 26.1.          (line 240)
* file-attribute-status-change-time:     Emacs 26.1.          (line 234)
* file-attribute-type:                   Emacs 26.1.          (line 203)
* file-attribute-user-id:                Emacs 26.1.          (line 213)
* file-backup-file-names:                Emacs 28.1.          (line 348)
* file-has-changed-p:                    Emacs 29.1.          (line 360)
* file-local-name:                       Emacs 26.1.          (line 167)
* file-modes-number-to-symbolic:         Emacs 28.1.          (line 342)
* file-name-concat:                      Emacs 28.1.          (line  53)
* file-name-parent-directory:            Emacs 29.1.          (line 351)
* file-name-quote:                       Emacs 26.1.          (line 102)
* file-name-quoted-p:                    Emacs 26.1.          (line  95)
* file-name-split:                       Emacs 29.1.          (line 341)
* file-name-unquote:                     Emacs 26.1.          (line  90)
* file-name-with-extension:              Emacs 28.1.          (line 225)
* file-size-human-readable-iec:          Emacs 27.1.          (line 251)
* fixnump:                               Emacs 27.1.          (line  60)
* flatten-tree:                          Emacs 27.1.          (line 132)
* format-message:                        Emacs 25.1.          (line  44)
* format-prompt:                         Emacs 28.1.          (line 254)
* funcall-with-delayed-message:          Emacs 29.1.          (line 144)
* function-alias-p:                      Emacs 29.1.          (line 229)
* garbage-collect-maybe:                 Emacs 28.1.          (line  68)
* gensym:                                Emacs 26.1.          (line  70)
* get-display-property:                  Emacs 29.1.          (line 169)
* get-scratch-buffer-create:             Emacs 29.1.          (line  38)
* hash-table-empty:                      Emacs 25.1.          (line 120)
* if-let:                                Emacs 25.1.          (line  97)
* if-let*:                               Emacs 26.1.          (line 149)
* ignore-errors:                         Emacs 27.1.          (line 106)
* image-property:                        Emacs 26.1.          (line 198)
* insert-into-buffer:                    Emacs 28.1.          (line  92)
* key-parse:                             Emacs 29.1.          (line 415)
* key-valid-p:                           Emacs 29.1.          (line 383)
* keymap-global-lookup:                  Emacs 29.1.          (line 510)
* keymap-global-set:                     Emacs 29.1.          (line 444)
* keymap-global-unset:                   Emacs 29.1.          (line 464)
* keymap-local-lookup:                   Emacs 29.1.          (line 506)
* keymap-local-set:                      Emacs 29.1.          (line 454)
* keymap-local-unset:                    Emacs 29.1.          (line 479)
* keymap-lookup:                         Emacs 29.1.          (line 493)
* keymap-set:                            Emacs 29.1.          (line 420)
* keymap-substitute:                     Emacs 29.1.          (line 485)
* length<:                               Emacs 28.1.          (line  45)
* length=:                               Emacs 28.1.          (line  42)
* length>:                               Emacs 28.1.          (line  50)
* list-of-strings-p:                     Emacs 29.1.          (line  62)
* macroexp-file-name:                    Emacs 28.1.          (line 301)
* macroexp-parse:                        Emacs 25.1.          (line 175)
* macroexp-quote:                        Emacs 25.1.          (line 172)
* macroexp-warn-and-return:              Emacs 28.1.          (line 305)
* macroexpand-1:                         Emacs 25.1.          (line 165)
* major-mode-restore:                    Emacs 27.1.          (line  22)
* major-mode-suspend:                    Emacs 27.1.          (line  13)
* make-empty-file:                       Emacs 27.1.          (line 254)
* make-lock-file-name:                   Emacs 28.1.          (line 356)
* make-nearby-temp-file:                 Emacs 26.1.          (line 120)
* make-separator-line:                   Emacs 28.1.          (line  88)
* mapcan:                                Emacs 26.1.          (line  53)
* mark-thing-at-mouse:                   Emacs 28.1.          (line 298)
* match-buffers:                         Emacs 29.1.          (line 288)
* minibuffer-history-value:              Emacs 27.1.          (line  32)
* named-let:                             Emacs 28.1.          (line 207)
* native-comp-available-p:               Emacs 28.1.          (line 377)
* ntake:                                 Emacs 29.1.          (line 209)
* package-get-version:                   Emacs 27.1.          (line 205)
* plistp:                                Emacs 29.1.          (line  65)
* pos-bol:                               Emacs 29.1.          (line 119)
* pos-eol:                               Emacs 29.1.          (line 123)
* process-lines-handling-status:         Emacs 28.1.          (line  20)
* process-lines-ignore-status:           Emacs 28.1.          (line  16)
* proper-list-p:                         Emacs 27.1.          (line  76)
* provided-mode-derived-p:               Emacs 27.1.          (line 247)
* read-answer:                           Emacs 26.1.          (line  17)
* read-char-from-minibuffer:             Emacs 27.1.          (line  44)
* read-multiple-choice:                  Emacs 26.1.          (line 185)
* readablep:                             Emacs 29.1.          (line  28)
* region-bounds:                         Emacs 25.1.          (line  28)
* region-noncontiguous-p:                Emacs 25.1.          (line  34)
* replace-regexp-in-string:              Emacs 28.1.          (line 117)
* replace-string-in-region:              Emacs 28.1.          (line 102)
* ring-resize:                           Emacs 27.1.          (line  28)
* save-mark-and-excursion:               Emacs 25.1.          (line  39)
* string-chop-newline:                   Emacs 28.1.          (line 202)
* string-clean-whitespace:               Emacs 28.1.          (line 171)
* string-distance:                       Emacs 27.1.          (line  86)
* string-equal-ignore-case:              Emacs 29.1.          (line 242)
* string-fill:                           Emacs 28.1.          (line 178)
* string-glyph-split:                    Emacs 29.1.          (line 297)
* string-greaterp:                       Emacs 25.1.          (line  64)
* string-lines:                          Emacs 28.1.          (line 186)
* string-pad:                            Emacs 28.1.          (line 193)
* string-replace:                        Emacs 28.1.          (line  77)
* string-search:                         Emacs 28.1.          (line  34)
* string-split:                          Emacs 29.1.          (line 248)
* subr-native-elisp-p:                   Emacs 28.1.          (line 372)
* subr-primitive-p:                      Emacs 28.1.          (line 365)
* substitute-quotes:                     Emacs 29.1.          (line  34)
* take:                                  Emacs 29.1.          (line 195)
* temporary-file-directory:              Emacs 26.1.          (line 137)
* text-property-search-backward:         Emacs 27.1.          (line 332)
* text-property-search-forward:          Emacs 27.1.          (line 260)
* text-quoting-style:                    Emacs 28.1.          (line  28)
* thing-at-mouse:                        Emacs 28.1.          (line 285)
* thread-first:                          Emacs 25.1.          (line 123)
* thread-last:                           Emacs 25.1.          (line 144)
* time-equal-p:                          Emacs 27.1.          (line 208)
* use-region-beginning:                  Emacs 29.1.          (line  47)
* use-region-end:                        Emacs 29.1.          (line  44)
* use-region-noncontiguous-p:            Emacs 29.1.          (line  41)
* when-let:                              Emacs 25.1.          (line 115)
* when-let*:                             Emacs 26.1.          (line 153)
* while-let:                             Emacs 29.1.          (line 602)
* with-buffer-unmodified-if-unchanged:   Emacs 29.1.          (line 320)
* with-delayed-message:                  Emacs 29.1.          (line 127)
* with-environment-variables:            Emacs 28.1.          (line 309)
* with-existing-directory:               Emacs 28.1.          (line 132)
* with-file-modes:                       Emacs 25.1.          (line  71)
* with-memoization:                      Emacs 29.1.          (line  68)
* with-minibuffer-selected-window:       Emacs 27.1.          (line  38)
* with-restriction:                      Emacs 29.1.          (line  73)
* with-suppressed-warnings:              Emacs 27.1.          (line  65)
* with-window-non-dedicated:             Emacs 28.1.          (line 385)
* without-restriction:                   Emacs 29.1.          (line 107)
* xor:                                   Emacs 27.1.          (line 142)


File: docm6Qz26.info,  Node: Variable Index,  Prev: Function Index,  Up: Top

Appendix B Variable Index
*************************

 [index ]
* Menu:

* exec-path:                             Emacs 27.1.          (line 228)
* gensym-counter:                        Emacs 26.1.          (line  77)
* lisp-directory:                        Emacs 29.1.          (line  17)
* mounted-file-systems:                  Emacs 26.1.          (line 133)
* regexp-unmatchable:                    Emacs 27.1.          (line 152)
* set-transient-map-timeout:             Emacs 29.1.          (line 727)
* text-quoting-style:                    Emacs 25.1.          (line  13)



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Node: Top829
Node: Introduction2258
Node: Overview2421
Node: Usage2947
Node: Limitations7304
Node: Support12150
Node: Emacs 25.112735
Node: Emacs 26.122137
Node: Emacs 27.139431
Node: Emacs 28.159828
Node: Emacs 29.179909
Node: Development116718
Node: Function Index117738
Node: Variable Index133024

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